170

I want to know if it is possible to add new methods to a resource controller in Laravel and how you do it.

I know that these methods are the default (index, create, store, edit, update, destroy). Now I want to add additional methods and routes to the same controller.

Is that possible?

13 Answers 13

332

Just add a route to that method separately, before you register the resource:

Route::get('foo/bar', 'FooController@bar');
Route::resource('foo', 'FooController');
8
  • 17
    Note that your new methods have to go above the ::resource otherwise you get an error message, "No query results for model".
    – mpen
    Mar 30, 2014 at 18:11
  • How would you pass a parameter like {id}? Currently I've coded my custom method inline in routes.php (like the example here laravel.com/docs/5.1/routing#route-parameters). Ideally I'd like to pass the parameter to run in FooController.
    – ATutorMe
    Jan 8, 2016 at 7:13
  • 1
    Found the problem - wasn't in the Route syntax. Was actually in some custom Middleware that I'm using! Route::get('foo/{id}/bar', 'FooController@bar'); will pass the id to bar($id) method. Thanks!
    – ATutorMe
    Jan 8, 2016 at 7:41
  • Can someone explain why the custom route should go above the resource route ??? I've done some tests and seems to have no diference between putting above or below... Jun 16, 2016 at 14:21
  • 4
    @RicardoVigatti - The resource registers this route: Route::get('foo/{id}', ...). This swallows all routes starting with foo and having one additional segments, including foo/bar. Jun 17, 2016 at 1:14
40

Yeah, It's possible..

In my case I add method : data to handle request for /data.json in HTTP POST method.

This what I did.

First we extends Illuminate\Routing\ResourceRegistrar to add new method data

<?php

namespace App\MyCustom\Routing;

use Illuminate\Routing\ResourceRegistrar as OriginalRegistrar;

class ResourceRegistrar extends OriginalRegistrar
{
    // add data to the array
    /**
     * The default actions for a resourceful controller.
     *
     * @var array
     */
    protected $resourceDefaults = ['index', 'create', 'store', 'show', 'edit', 'update', 'destroy', 'data'];


    /**
     * Add the data method for a resourceful route.
     *
     * @param  string  $name
     * @param  string  $base
     * @param  string  $controller
     * @param  array   $options
     * @return \Illuminate\Routing\Route
     */
    protected function addResourceData($name, $base, $controller, $options)
    {
        $uri = $this->getResourceUri($name).'/data.json';

        $action = $this->getResourceAction($name, $controller, 'data', $options);

        return $this->router->post($uri, $action);
    }
}

After that, make your new ServiceProvider or use AppServiceProvider instead.

In method boot, add this code :

    public function boot()
    {
        $registrar = new \App\MyCustom\Routing\ResourceRegistrar($this->app['router']);

        $this->app->bind('Illuminate\Routing\ResourceRegistrar', function () use ($registrar) {
            return $registrar;
        });
    }

then :

add to your route :

Route::resource('test', 'TestController');

Check by php artisan route:list And you will find new method 'data'

8
  • Your solution works for me.. Can you tell me if you discovered any issue after some months using this code? Oct 19, 2016 at 13:19
  • Thanks @RicardoVigatti. I used this since laravel 5.2 and now I use this in my recent project with L5.3 and have no issue with it. Let me know if you have one, may be I can help you.. Oct 20, 2016 at 14:07
  • nice, i'm implementing this in my 5.0 project. The solution seems very consistent, but, if any issue come to pass, it will be after some weeks. Oct 20, 2016 at 15:09
  • @MokhamadRofi'udin I've implemented your solution, the new route is added to the route list but it seems that the corresponding method is not added. Am I missing something ?
    – Siavosh
    Nov 22, 2016 at 20:55
  • @Siavosh just write your method in controller i.e. I add method data() : ` public function data(Request $request) { }` Nov 26, 2016 at 11:38
35

I just did that, to add a GET "delete" method.

After creating your files, you just need to add

'AntonioRibeiro\Routing\ExtendedRouterServiceProvider',

to 'providers' in your app/config.php

Edit the Route alias in this same file:

'Route'           => 'Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route',

changing it to

'Route'           => 'AntonioRibeiro\Facades\ExtendedRouteFacade',

And make sure those files are being autoloaded, they must be in some directory that you have in your composer.json ("autoload" section).

Then you just need to:

Route::resource('users', 'UsersController');

And this (look at the last line) is the result if you run php artisan routes:

routes list Those are my source files:

ExtendedRouteFacade.pas

<?php namespace AntonioRibeiro\Facades;

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Facade as IlluminateFacade;

class ExtendedRouteFacade extends IlluminateFacade {

    /**
     * Determine if the current route matches a given name.
     *
     * @param  string  $name
     * @return bool
     */
    public static function is($name)
    {
        return static::$app['router']->currentRouteNamed($name);
    }

    /**
     * Determine if the current route uses a given controller action.
     *
     * @param  string  $action
     * @return bool
     */
    public static function uses($action)
    {
        return static::$app['router']->currentRouteUses($action);
    }

    /**
     * Get the registered name of the component.
     *
     * @return string
     */
    protected static function getFacadeAccessor() { return 'router'; }

}

ExtendedRouter.pas

<?php namespace AntonioRibeiro\Routing;

class ExtendedRouter extends \Illuminate\Routing\Router {

    protected $resourceDefaults = array('index', 'create', 'store', 'show', 'edit', 'update', 'destroy', 'delete');

    /**
     * Add the show method for a resourceful route.
     *
     * @param  string  $name
     * @param  string  $base
     * @param  string  $controller
     * @return void
     */
    protected function addResourceDelete($name, $base, $controller)
    {
        $uri = $this->getResourceUri($name).'/{'.$base.'}/destroy';

        return $this->get($uri, $this->getResourceAction($name, $controller, 'delete'));
    }

}

ExtendedRouteServiceProvider.pas

<?php namespace AntonioRibeiro\Routing;

use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;

class ExtendedRouterServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider {

    /**
     * Indicates if loading of the provider is deferred.
     *
     * @var bool
     */
    protected $defer = true;

    /**
     * Register the service provider.
     *
     * @return void
     */
    public function register()
    {
        $this->app['router'] = $this->app->share(function() { return new ExtendedRouter($this->app); });
    }

    /**
     * Get the services provided by the provider.
     *
     * @return array
     */
    public function provides()
    {
        return array('router');
    }

}
4
  • 3
    Can you please provide the same for Laravel 5 and Above? I have been trying to reproduce this... But I can't seem to find where they are registering the 'route' Accessor in the container. May 5, 2016 at 0:14
  • 2
    why the file has the extension .pas? Jul 25, 2019 at 0:07
  • Make sense but provider part seems to not work with laravel 8.0. Nov 15, 2020 at 21:34
  • Overcomplicated sadly
    – Ozan Kurt
    Apr 4, 2021 at 8:38
16
Route::resource('foo', 'FooController');
Route::controller('foo', 'FooController');

Give this a try .Put you extra methods like getData() etc etc .. This worked for me to keep route.php clean

2
  • Yas this works . Laravel 5.1 Documentation did't mention that Route::resource and Route::controller can be used together rather they mentioned about Supplementing Resource Controllers. So this is confused. But your ans proved that these are can be used together
    – Amir
    Nov 8, 2015 at 20:20
  • I am sorry Hassan jamal, these two are not working together. So now how can I set a custom post method in a controller if I use only Route::resource
    – Amir
    Nov 8, 2015 at 21:15
3

Using Laravel >5 Find the web.php file in routes folder add your methods

You can use route::resource to route all these methods index, show, store, update, destroy in your controller in one line

Route::get('foo/bar', 'NameController@bar');
Route::resource('foo', 'NameController');
3

Previously I defined my route as:

Route::get('foo/bar', 'FooController@bar');
Route::resource('foo', 'FooController');

It gave the error:

route foo.bar is not defined

And then after some Googling I added name

Route::get('foo/bar', 'FooController@bar')->name('foo.bar');

And it worked fine.

1
  • It works. In recent version of Laravel (e.g - 10.x) you can do this - Route::get('foo/bar', [FooController::class, 'bar'])->name('foo.bar'); Sep 1, 2023 at 13:29
2

I solve by

Create a custom router file that extends the BaseRouter

// src/app/Custom/Router.php


<?php

namespace App\Custom;

use Illuminate\Routing\Router as BaseRouter;
use Illuminate\Support\Str;

class Router extends BaseRouter
{
    public function customResource($name, $controller, array $options = [])
    {
        $model = Str::singular($name); // this is optional, i need it for Route Model Binding

        $this
            ->get( // set the http methods
                $name .'/{' . $model . '}/audit',
                $controller . '@audit'
            )->name($name . '.audit');

        return $this->resource($name, $controller, $options);
    }
}

Then register at src/bootstrap/app.php

$app->singleton('router', function ($app) {
    return new \App\Custom\Router($app['events'], $app);
});

And use it on /routes/web.php

Route::customResource(
    'entries',
    'EntryController'
);
1

Just add a new method and a route to that method.

In your controller:

public function foo($bar=“default”)
{
      //do stuff
}

And in your web routes

Route::get(“foo/{$bar}”, “MyController@foo”);

Just be sure the method in the controller is public.

1

As of Laravel 9 this appears to have been made much simpler. The following works fine, even if you add the new method after the Resource controller was created.

Route::get('/foo/bar', [FooController::class, 'bar']);

Route::resource('/foo', FooController::class);

Just be sure to include the new method on top, as the remaining /foo/[any] namespace will be reserved for the Resource controller on that line. As is the convention for Laravel routes.

1
1

I'm new to Laravel, but as of Laravel 10, I was able to group resource and custom route all together like that. And you can add as many custom route as you would like into that group.

Route::controller(FooController::class)->group(function () {
    Route::resource('foos', FooController::class);
    // The route to add
    Route::get('yourroute/{foo}', 'test')->name('foos.test');
})->middleware(['auth', 'verified']);

If you run artisan route:list you can validate it is working as expected.

0

you can add your macros, in my case it looks like this.

use Illuminate\Routing\Router;

Router::macro('crudResource', function ($name, $controller, array $options = []) {
    $only = ['index', 'show', 'store', 'update', 'destroy', 'restore'];

    if (isset($options['except'])) {
        $only = array_diff($only, (array)$options['except']);
    }

    if (in_array('restore', $only)) {
        $this->put($name . '/restore/{' . ($model = Str::singular($name)) . '}', [$controller, 'restore'])
            ->name($name . '.restore')
            ->can('delete', $model)
            ->withTrashed();
    }

    return $this->resource($name, $controller, array_merge([
                                                               'only' => $only,
                                                           ], $options))
        ->withTrashed(['index', 'show']);
});

Route

Route::crudResource('initial_balance_banks', InitialBalanceBankController::class);
Route::crudResource('bank_movements', BankMovementController::class)->except('restore');
Route::crudResource('outcoming_bank_orders', OutcomingBankOrderController::class, ['except' => ['restore']]);

enter image description here

0

I just add a new method called (files) and works !!!

Route::get('sections/{section}/files', [SectionController::class,'files'])->name('sections.files'); Route::resource('sections',SectionController::class)->names('sections');

1
  • Thank you for your interest in contributing to the Stack Overflow community. This question already has quite a few answers—including one that has been extensively validated by the community. Are you certain your approach hasn’t been given previously? If so, it would be useful to explain how your approach is different, under what circumstances your approach might be preferred, and/or why you think the previous answers aren’t sufficient. Can you kindly edit your answer to offer an explanation? Feb 2 at 0:40
-3

This works pretty good too. No need to add more routes just use show method of the resource controller like this :

public function show($name){

 switch ($name){
   case 'foo':
    $this -> foo();
    break;
   case 'bar':
    $this ->bar();
    break; 
  defautlt:
    abort(404,'bad request');
    break;
 }

}
public function foo(){}
publcc function bar(){}

I use the default to throw custom error page.

3
  • 3
    This feels like a real code smell. I wouldnt want my controllers handling multiple actions. May 24, 2019 at 14:50
  • Isn't this breaking the REST concept? May 18, 2021 at 20:31
  • There is no need to do such thing!!! That's why we have routes in the first place. The routing logic can not be placed on the controllers. Jun 17, 2021 at 15:00

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