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Reusable set of routes to sign and manage S3 uploads with Uppy.

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Laravel Uppy Companion

This package offers a handful of routes that provide the Uppy JS uploader with the endpoints it expects to sign and send multipart uploads directly to an S3 bucket.

Example Usage

In your routes.php file, simply call the static method on the provided controller to register the routes:

Route::group(['prefix' => 'your/upload/prefix'], function () {
    \STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion::routes();
});

Then provide the AwsS3Multipart or AwsS3 Uppy driver with /sign as its companionUrl:

uppy.use(Uppy.AwsS3Multipart, {
    companionUrl: 'your/upload/prefix/sign',
});

Service Provider Configuration

Because FileRocket requires information about the current user and/or the active organization before determining the S3Client and bucket to send uploads to, the LaravelUppyCompanion is configured in your AppServiceProvider, and will accept either string values or callback functions. If a callback function is provided, it won't be called until necessary, and it will only be called once per request.

Simple values known at boot():

App::make(\STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion::class)->configure(
    'a-known-static-bucket',
    new S3Client(config('aws'))
);

User isn't available in AppServiceProvider::boot(), but will return the correct value by the time the callback is called.

App::make(\STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion::class)->configure(
    fn() => user()->s3_bucket,
    fn() => user()->s3client()
);

Advanced

You may create and configure an unlimited number of companions. This is useful if you need your app has multiple buckets which should be used in different contexts.

In your AppServiceProvider::register() method, create and configure new companion singletons.

public function register()
{
    App::singleton('companion.public-media', function ($app) {
        return new \STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion(
            'my-public-media',
            new S3Client(config('aws'))
        );
    });

    App::singleton('companion.archive', function ($app) {
        return new \STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion(
            'my-archive-bucket',
            new S3Client(config('archive-storage'))
        );
    });
}

Then, in your routes.php file, call the static routes method with the companion instance as the argument.

Route::group(['prefix' => 'public/media/upload/prefix'], function () {
    \STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion::routes(App::make('companion.public-media'));
});

Route::group(['prefix' => 'private/archive/upload/prefix'], function () {
    \STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion::routes(App::make('companion.archive'));
});

File Keys

By default, the companion will generate a UUID with a file extension for each file uploaded. If you wish to use a different key, you may pass a callback function to the configure() method.

App::make(\STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion::class)->configure(
    'my-bucket',
    new S3Client(config('aws')),
    fn($filename) => $filename
);

The default key generator is available as a static method on the companion class:

App::make(\STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion::class)->configure(
    'my-bucket',
    new S3Client(config('aws')),
    fn($filename) => \STS\LaravelUppyCompanion\LaravelUppyCompanion::getUUID($filename)
);

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Reusable set of routes to sign and manage S3 uploads with Uppy.

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