Laravel Client - Build Activity Feeds & Streams with GetStream.io
stream-laravel is a Laravel client for Stream. You can use this in any Laravel application, or in any application that uses Eloquent ORM (illuminate/database
) as a standalone ORM.
You can sign up for a Stream account at https://getstream.io/get_started.
Note there is also a lower level PHP - Stream integration library which is suitable for all PHP applications.
You can build:
https://github.com/GetStream/Stream-Laravel-Example
https://github.com/GetStream/Stream-Example-PHP
Begin by installing this package through Composer. Edit your project’s composer.json
file to require get-stream/stream-laravel
:
"require": {
"get-stream/stream-laravel": "~2.3.5"
},
Next, update Composer:
composer update
Laravel prior to 5.5 (no longer supported)
Add 'GetStream\StreamLaravel\StreamLaravelServiceProvider'
to your list of providers in config/app.php
:
'providers' => [
GetStream\StreamLaravel\StreamLaravelServiceProvider::class,
...
],
And add the FeedManager
facade 'GetStream\StreamLaravel\Facades\FeedManager'
to your list of aliases in config/app.php
:
'aliases' => [
'FeedManager' => GetStream\StreamLaravel\Facades\FeedManager::class,
...
],
Publish the configuration file:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="GetStream\StreamLaravel\StreamLaravelServiceProvider"
This will create config/stream-laravel.php
. We will set our credentials after they are created in the Stream Dashboard.
Now, login to GetStream.io and create an application in the dashboard.
Retrieve the API key, API secret, and API app id, which are shown in your dashboard.
Create feeds in your new application. By default, you should create the following:
Set your key, secret, and app id in config/stream-laravel.php
file as their are shown in your dashboard. Also set the location for good measure. For example:
return [
/*
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Your GetStream.io API credentials (you can them from getstream.io/dashboard)
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
*/
'api_key' => '[API KEY HERE]',
'api_secret' => '[API SECRET HERE]',
'api_app_id' => '[API APP ID HERE]',
/*
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Client connection options
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
*/
'location' => 'us-east',
'timeout' => 3,
/*
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| The default feed manager class
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
*/
You can also set the name of your feeds here:
/*
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| The feed that keeps content created by its author
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
*/
'user_feed' => 'user',
/*
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| The feed containing notification activities
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
*/
'notification_feed' => 'notification',
/*
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| The feeds that shows activities from followed user feeds
|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
*/
'news_feeds' => [
'timeline' => 'timeline',
'timeline_aggregated' => 'timeline_aggregated',
]
And that should get you off and running with Stream-Laravel. Have lots of fun!
Begin by installing this package through Composer.
composer require get-stream/stream-laravel
Add 'GetStream\StreamLaravel\StreamLumenServiceProvider'
to the list of providers in bootstrap/app.php
$app->register(\GetStream\StreamLaravel\StreamLumenServiceProvider::class);
Manually create a config file in ./config/stream-laravel.php…
<?php
return [
'api_key' => 'API_KEY',
'api_secret' => 'API_SECRET',
'api_app_id' => 'API_APP_ID',
'location' => 'us-east',
'timeout' => 3,
];
and tell Lumen to configure it, in bootstrap.
$app->configure('stream-laravel');
Stream-Laravel provides instant integration with Eloquent models - extending the GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\Activity
class will give you automatic tracking of your models to user feeds.
For example:
class Pin extends Eloquent {
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\ActivityTrait;
Everytime a Pin is created it will be stored in the feed of the user that created it, and when a Pin instance is deleted than it will get removed as well.
Automatically!
Models are stored in feeds as activities. An activity is composed of at least the following data fields: actor, verb, object, time. You can also add more custom data if needed.
object is a reference to the model instance itself
actor is a reference to the user attribute of the instance
verb is a string representation of the class name
In order to work out-of-the-box the Activity class makes few assumptions:
You can change how a model instance is stored as activity by implementing specific methods as explained later.
Below shows an example how to change your class if the model belongs to an author instead of to a user.
class Pin extends Eloquent {
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\ActivityTrait;
public function author()
{
return $this->belongsTo('Author');
}
public function activityActorMethodName()
{
return 'author';
}
Often, you’ll want to store more data than just the basic fields. You achieve this by implementing the activityExtraData
method in the model.
NOTE: you should only return data that can be serialized by PHP’s json_encode function
class Pin extends Eloquent {
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\ActivityTrait;
public function activityExtraData()
{
return ['is_retweet' => $this->is_retweet];
}
By default, the verb field is the class name of the activity, you can change that implementing the activityVerb
method.
class Pin extends Eloquent {
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\ActivityTrait;
public function activityVerb()
{
return 'pin';
}
Stream Laravel comes with a FeedManager class that helps with all common feed operations. You can get an instance of the manager with FeedManager
if you defined the facade alias (see above in the install), or with App::make('feed_manager')
if you did not.
To get you started the manager has feeds pre configured. You can add more feeds if your application needs it. The three feeds are divided in three categories.
The user feed stores all activities for a user. Think of it as your personal Facebook page. You can easily get this feed from the manager.
$feed = FeedManager::getUserFeed($user->id);
The news feeds store the activities from the people you follow.
There is both a timeline (similar to twitter) and an aggregated timeline (like facebook).
$timelineFeed = FeedManager::getNewsFeeds($user->id)['timeline'];
$aggregatedTimelineFeed = FeedManager::getNewsFeeds($user->id)['timeline_aggregated'];
The notification feed can be used to build notification functionality.
Below we show an example of how you can read the notification feed.
notification_feed = FeedManager::getNotificationFeed($user->id);
By default the notification feed will be empty. You can specify which users to notify when your model gets created. In the case of a retweet you probably want to notify the user of the parent tweet.
class Tweet extends Eloquent {
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\ActivityTrait;
public function activityNotify()
{
if ($this->isRetweet) {
$targetFeed = FeedManager::getNotificationFeed($this->parent->user->id);
return [$targetFeed];
}
}
Another example would be following a user. You would commonly want to notify the user which is being followed.
class Follow extends Eloquent {
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\ActivityTrait;
public function target()
{
return $this->belongsTo('User');
}
public function activityNotify()
{
$targetFeed = FeedManager::getNotificationFeed($this->target->id);
return [$targetFeed];
}
To create the newsfeeds you need to notify the system about follow relationships. The manager comes with APIs to let a user’s news feeds follow another user’s feed. This code lets the current user’s timeline and timeline_aggregated feeds follow the target_user’s personal feed.
FeedManager::followUser($userId, $targetId);
When you read data from feeds, a like activity will look like this:
{'actor': 'User:1', 'verb': 'like', 'object': 'Like:42'}
This is far from ready for usage in your template. We call the process of loading the references from the database enrichment. An example is shown below:
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Enrich;
$enricher = new Enrich();
$feed = FeedManager::getNewsFeeds(Auth::id())['timeline'];
$activities = $feed->getActivities(0,25)['results'];
$activities = $enricher->enrichActivities($activities);
return View::make('feed', ['activities' => $activities]);
The enrich method returns an array of objects of type EnrichedActivity
which you can also parse yourself. For example, in an API where you are using spatie/laravel-fractal
you could use a loop like the following in your Controller to return json to your api.
On your model:
use App\Transformers\MyModelEnrichTransformer;
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\ActivityTrait;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class MyModel extends Model
{
public function enrichTransformer() {
return new MyModelEnrichTransformer();
}
}
In your controller:
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Enrich;
$feed = FeedManager::getNewsFeeds($user->id)['timeline'];
$enricher = new Enrich();
$activities = $feed->getActivities(0, 25)['results'];
$activities = $enricher->enrichActivities($activities);
$collection = new Collection();
foreach ($activities as $activity) {
$record = [
"actor" => $this->transformData($activity["actor"], $activity["actor"]->enrichTransformer()),
"object" => $this->transformData($activity["object"], $activity["object"]->enrichTransformer()),
"verb" => $activity["verb"],
"foreign_id" => $activity["foreign_id"],
"time" => $activity["time"],
];
if (!empty($activity["target"])) {
array_push($record, [
"target" => $this->transformData($activity["target"], $activity["target"]->enrichTransformer()),
]);
}
$collection->push($record);
}
return response()->json($collection);
Now that you’ve enriched the activities you can render them in a view.
For convenience we includes a basic view:
@section('content')
<div class="container">
<div class="container-pins">
@foreach ($activities as $activity)
@include('stream-laravel.render_activity', ['activity' => $activity])
@endforeach
</div>
</div>
@stop
The stream-laravel.render_activity
view tag will render the view activity.$activity[“verb”] view with the activity as context.
For example activity/tweet.blade.php will be used to render an normal activity with verb tweet and aggregated_activity/like.blade.php for an aggregated activity with verb like
If you need to support different kind of templates for the same activity, you can send a third parameter to change the view selection.
The example below will use the view activity/homepage_like.html
@include('stream-laravel.render_activity', ['activity' => $activity, 'prefix' => 'homepage'])
Sometimes you’ll want to customize how enrichment works. The documentation will show you several common options.
If you store references to model instances in the activity extra_data you can use the Enrich class to take care of it for you:
use \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Enrich;
class Pin extends Eloquent {
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\ActivityTrait;
public function activityExtraData()
{
$ref = Utils::createModelReference($this->parentTweet);
return ['parent_tweet' => $ref];
}
// tell the enricher to enrich parent_tweet
$enricher = new Enrich(['actor', 'object', 'parent_tweet']);
$activities = $feed->getActivities(0,25)['results'];
$activities = $enricher->enrichActivities($activities);
You will commonly access related objects such as activity[‘object’]->user. To prevent your newsfeed to run N queries you can instruct the manager to load related objects. The manager will use Eloquent’s With
functionality.
class Pin extends Eloquent {
use GetStream\StreamLaravel\Eloquent\ActivityTrait;
public function activityLazyLoading()
{
return ['user'];
}
When needed you can also use the low level PHP API directly. Documentation is available at the Stream website.
$specialFeed = FeedManager::getClient->feed('special', '42')
$specialFeed->followFeed('timeline', '60')
We welcome code changes that improve this library or fix a problem, please make sure to follow all best practices and add tests if applicable before submitting a Pull Request on Github. We are very happy to merge your code in the official repository. Make sure to sign our Contributor License Agreement (CLA) first. See our license file for more details.
Getting started:
$ composer install
$ ./vendor/bin/phpunit
Copyright © 2014-2022 Stream.io Inc, and individual contributors. All rights reserved.
See the file “LICENSE” for information on the history of this software, terms & conditions for usage, and a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.