Introduction
Artisan is the name of the command-line interface included with Laravel. It provides a number of helpful commands for your use while developing your application. It is driven by the powerful Symfony Console component.
Usage
Listing All Available Commands
To view a list of all available Artisan commands, you may use the list
command:
php artisan list
Viewing The Help Screen For A Command
Every command also includes a "help" screen which displays and describes the command's available arguments and options. To view a help screen, simply precede the name of the command with help
:
php artisan help migrate
Specifying The Configuration Environment
You may specify the configuration environment that should be used while running a command using the --env
switch:
php artisan migrate --env=local
Displaying Your Current Laravel Version
You may also view the current version of your Laravel installation using the --version
option:
php artisan --version
Calling Commands Outside Of CLI
Sometimes you may wish to execute an Artisan command outside of the CLI. For example, you may wish to fire an Artisan command from an HTTP route. Just use the Artisan
facade:
Route::get('/foo', function()
{
$exitCode = Artisan::call('command:name', ['--option' => 'foo']);
//
});
You may even queue Artisan commands so they are processed in the background by your queue workers:
Route::get('/foo', function()
{
Artisan::queue('command:name', ['--option' => 'foo']);
//
});
Scheduling Artisan Commands
In the past, developers have generated a Cron entry for each console command they wished to schedule. However, this is a headache. Your console schedule is no longer in source control, and you must SSH into your server to add the Cron entries. Let's make our lives easier. The Laravel command scheduler allows you to fluently and expressively define your command schedule within Laravel itself, and only a single Cron entry is needed on your server.
Your command schedule is stored in the app/Console/Kernel.php
file. Within this class you will see a schedule
method. To help you get started, a simple example is included with the method. You are free to add as many scheduled jobs as you wish to the Schedule
object. The only Cron entry you need to add to your server is this:
* * * * * php /path/to/artisan schedule:run 1>> /dev/null 2>&1
This Cron will call the Laravel command scheduler every minute. Then, Laravel evalutes your scheduled jobs and runs the jobs that are due. It couldn't be easier!
More Scheduling Examples
Let's look at a few more scheduling examples:
Scheduling Closures
$schedule->call(function()
{
// Do some task...
})->hourly();
Scheduling Terminal Commands
$schedule->exec('composer self-update')->daily();
Manual Cron Expression
$schedule->command('foo')->cron('* * * * *');
Frequent Jobs
$schedule->command('foo')->everyFiveMinutes();
$schedule->command('foo')->everyTenMinutes();
$schedule->command('foo')->everyThirtyMinutes();
Daily Jobs
$schedule->command('foo')->daily();
Daily Jobs At A Specific Time (24 Hour Time)
$schedule->command('foo')->dailyAt('15:00');
Twice Daily Jobs
$schedule->command('foo')->twiceDaily();
Job That Runs Every Weekday
$schedule->command('foo')->weekdays();
Weekly Jobs
$schedule->command('foo')->weekly();
// Schedule weekly job for specific day (0-6) and time...
$schedule->command('foo')->weeklyOn(1, '8:00');
Monthly Jobs
$schedule->command('foo')->monthly();
Limit The Environment The Jobs Should Run In
$schedule->command('foo')->monthly()->environments('production');
Indicate The Job Should Run Even When Application Is In Maintenance Mode
$schedule->command('foo')->monthly()->evenInMaintenanceMode();
Only Allow Job To Run When Callback Is True
$schedule->command('foo')->monthly()->when(function()
{
return true;
});