Megaphone is a Laravel Livewire based component that uses the power of Laravels built in Notifications system to allow you to add "Bell Icon Notification System" to your app.
Megaphone also ships with an Admin form component that allows you to send out a notification to all your users at once. Perfect for announcing new features or planned maintenance!
Before using Megaphone, a demo is available for you to view and try the Bell Icon component and Admin component. Aside from some minor styling changes to the Admin component so it fits the layout better, everything is "out the box" and will be exactly as is when you install Megaphone yourself.
Megaphone has been updated to support Livewire 3. This also means PHP requirements have been updated to match the requirements of Livewire 3 which means you need to be running PHP 8.1 or above (PHP 7.4 and 8.0 are no longer supported). Then make sure you follow the Livewire upgrade guide.
Update your Megaphone requirement to 2.* by running the following command in your terminal.
composer require mbarlow/megaphone "^2.0"
If you previously included AlpineJS specifically for Megaphone then you can now remove that from your JS include because it is now bundled with Livewire.
If you are using the Admin component and are running with the Megaphone views published to your resources folder, you may wish to make these manual changes.
Changes are all to create-announcement.blade.php
which, if published, should be found at resources/views/vendor/megaphone/admin/create-announcement.blade.php
.
Find wire:model="type"
and replace it with wire:model.live="type"
.
Find all instances of wire:model.lazy
and replace it with wire:model.blur
.
For the Livewire 2 version of Megaphone, see the 1.x versions of Megaphone and the 1.x branch.
Simply require the package via composer into your Laravel app.
composer require mbarlow/megaphone
If you aren't already using Laravel Livewire in your app, Megaphone should include the package via its dependency. Once composer has finished installing, make sure you run the Livewire installation steps.
Once Livewire has been installed, if you haven't already, ensure the Laravel Database Notifications have been installed into your app.
php artisan notifications:table
php artisan migrate
This should create database table used to house your notifications. Next, make sure your User model (or relevant alternative model) has the notifiable trait added as mentioned in the Laravel Documentation and also add the HasMegaphone
trait provided by Megaphone.
<?php
namespace App\Models;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Auth\User as Authenticatable;
use Illuminate\Notifications\Notifiable;
use MBarlow\Megaphone\HasMegaphone;
class User extends Authenticatable
{
use Notifiable;
use HasMegaphone;
}
Lastly, publish the Megaphone assets. This should publish the Config file as well as the templates and stylesheets. You can find the published templates within resources/views/vendor/megaphone
.
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="MBarlow\Megaphone\MegaphoneServiceProvider"
If you are not using the default user model found at App\Models\User
, you will need to amend the value of the model
attribute, defined in the megaphone.php config file. Simply change the value to the path of your User model.
To get started using megaphone, drop in the Megaphone Livewire component into your template.
<livewire:megaphone />
This will render a Bell Icon where the component has been placed. When clicked a static sidebar will appear on the right of the screen which will show all the existing and any new notifications to the user.
As default, Megaphone uses TailwindCSS to style the Bell Icon and the notification sidebar. If you are not using Tailwind you may want to include the Megaphone CSS into your template. Add the following blade directive to your sites <head></head>
.
@megaphoneStyles
If you are using TailwindCSS, make sure the Megaphone views are added to any Tailwind config to ensure the correct classes are compiled.
If you wish to recompile Megaphone stylesheet, ensure you have node and npm installed and run npm install
. To compile the styles then run npx mix
as per the Larave Mix Documentation
As default, Megaphone will only load notifications that have been registered within the Megaphone config file. Notifications shipped with Megaphone will be within config('megaphone.types')
. This will be merged with the key values of config('megaphone.customTypes')
to create the list of supported notifications.
This means, you can see use the Laravel Notification system for other parts of your system without them appearing in the Megaphone notifications list.
To send a Megaphone notification instantiate a new notification that extends MBarlow\Megaphone\Types\BaseAnnouncement
. Megaphone ships with 3 as default, MBarlow\Megaphone\Types\General
, MBarlow\Megaphone\Types\Important
and MBarlow\Megaphone\Types\NewFeature
.
$notification = new \MBarlow\Megaphone\Types\Important(
'Expected Downtime!', // Notification Title
'We are expecting some downtime today at around 15:00 UTC for some planned maintenance. Read more on a blog post!', // Notification Body
'https://example.com/link', // Optional: URL. Megaphone will add a link to this URL within the Notification display.
'Read More...' // Optional: Link Text. The text that will be shown on the link button.
);
Now, simply notify the required user of the notification as per the Laravel Documentation.
$user = \App\Models\User::find(1);
$user->notify($notification);
Next time User ID 1 visits your app, their Bell Icon will have a red indicator with "1" inside to denote 1 new, unread notification.
As mentioned, you can add your own notification types to Megaphone. In order to do this, first create a new class within your application and make sure it extends MBarlow\Megaphone\Types\BaseAnnouncement
, for example:
<?php
namespace App\Megaphone;
use MBarlow\Megaphone\Types\BaseAnnouncement;
class MyCustomNotification extends BaseAnnouncement
{
}
Next you will need to create the view file for how Megaphone should render that notification. To get you started you can use the base template the General, Important and New Feature notifications uses. So for example, create a new view within resources/views/megaphone/my-custom-notification.blade.php
.
@include('megaphone::types.base', ['icon' => 'ICON SVG HERE'])
Simply, add a relevant SVG Icon for your notification within the blade include parameters array, and you're good to go.
Lastly, you need to tell Megaphone about this notification. Open up the Megaphone config file config/megaphone.php
and find the customTypes
attribute. This should be an associative array with the FQDN of the notification class as the key and the path to the view as the value. For example,
/*
* Custom notification types specific to your App
*/
'customTypes' => [
/*
Associative array in the format of
\Namespace\To\Notification::class => 'path.to.view',
*/
\App\Megaphone\MyCustomNotification::class => 'megaphone.my-custom-notification',
],
Now you can trigger the notification and a user will receive it via their Bell Icon.
$notification = new \App\Megaphone\MyCustomNotification(
'Hello World',
'This is a custom notification, hope you like our app!'
);
$user = \App\Models\User::find(1);
$user->notify($notification);
The usage shown so far is great for automatic flows, for example, letting a user know an action has completed in the background, "Your file is ready for download", "Your server has finished setting up", etc... but sometimes you may want to send notifications en masse.
You may want to let users know that some downtime is expected for maintenance or that a cool new feature has launched. To cover these bases, Megaphone ships with an Admin component providing a form to send a notification to all users.
To use the component simply create a new page within your admin area, or create a password-protected page within your application that only you as the application owners can access and drop in this Livewire component.
<livewire:megaphone-admin></livewire:megaphone-admin>
Visit your page and you will be presented with a form, to first select the notification type and then fill out the title, body, link and link text. Once you have filled everything out, hit send to push the notification out to all users.
The form has been styled with TailwindCSS so if it doesn't look styled correctly make sure to include TailwindCSS on the page that is showing the Admin component. Alternatively, the view file will have been published along with the other Megaphone assets so you can customise the form styling within resources/views/vendor/megaphone/admin/create-announcement.blade.php
.
As default, the notification type list is created by merging the array of default notifications within config('megaphone.types')
, with the key values of the custom types array found within config('megaphone.customTypes')
.
If you have added a lot of custom types or if you have some system notifications that should not be selectable from this type list, you can build your own type list within the adminTypeList
attribute of the megaphone config.
Simply create an array of all the notification classes you wish to have available in the drop down list.
'adminTypeList' => [
\MBarlow\Megaphone\Types\NewFeature::class,
\App\Megaphone\MyCustomNotification::class,
],
This example would mean only the default New Feature notification and your Custom Notification would be available from the drop down menu.
The name shown for each notification in the drop down menu is calculated from the class name within the BaseAnnouncement
class that all Megaphone notifications extend. If Megaphone is unable to calculate the name of a custom notification correctly, or you wish to label it differently within the Admin Component type list, you can define a name()
method within your notification. Megaphone will use this to display the label.
<?php
namespace App\Megaphone;
use MBarlow\Megaphone\Types\BaseAnnouncement;
class MyCustomNotification extends BaseAnnouncement
{
public static function name(): string
{
return 'Awesome Notification';
}
}
To help keep your database and your users notifications tidy, Megaphone also ships with a console command that can be added to your apps schedule to clear old notifications.
Simply add the following to your Console/Kernal.php
file within the schedule()
method.
$schedule->command('megaphone:clear-announcements')->daily();
This will clear any "read" Megaphone notifications older than 2 weeks old. This allows any user that may not have logged in for a number of weeks to still view the notification before it would be cleared.
The 2-week time limit for old notifications is controlled via the Megaphone config file, config('megaphone.clearAfter')
. So should you wish to alter this cut off point, simply change this value to either extend or shorten the cut off.
Because notifications can be attached to any model via the Notifiable
trait, Megaphone too can be attached to any model providing the model also has the Notifiable
trait attached.
As default, Megaphone assumes you will be attaching it to the standard Laravel User model and when loading notifications, it will attempt to retrieve the ID of the logged in user from the Request object.
If you are wanting to attach Megaphone to a Team model for example, change the model
attribute of the published megaphone config file, megaphone.php
.
When rendering the Megaphone component, you will then need to pass in the ID of the notifiable model into the component so Megaphone can load the correct notifications
<livewire:megaphone :notifiableId="$user->team->id"></livewire:megaphone>
If you wish to run the tests, clone out the repository
git clone git@github.com:mikebarlow/megaphone.git
Change to the root of the repository and run composer install with the dev dependencies
cd megaphone
composer install
A script is defined in the composer.json
to run both the code sniffer and the unit tests
composer run test
Or run them individually as required
./vendor/bin/pest
./vendor/bin/phpcs --standard=PSR2 src
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.