A common setup in Laravel routing is to use nested resources with route model binding. This allows great logical urls that represent the actual relationships that the models have with each other in the database. An example of this might be /library/section/book/. The book is owned by the section, the section is owned by the library. But when using route model binding, the ids of these resources are turned into models without any knowledge of each other. /1/7/234 would return the models of these resources but there is no guarantee that they are properly related. book 234 might not be owned by section 7 and section 7 might not be owned by library 1. I often have a method at the top of each controller that handles checking what I call relationship tests. This function would be found in the Book controller.
private function relationshipCheck($library, $section, $book)
{
if(library->id == $section->library_id) {
if($book != false) {
if($section->id == $book->section_id) {
return true;
} else {
return response()->json(["code" => 401], 401);
}
} else {
return true;
}
} else {
return response()->json(["code" => 401, 401);
}
}
What is the proper way to handle using these sorts of routes that represent relationships? Is there a more automated way to do this? Is there a good reason to just ignore everything but the last resource when the relationships are all one to many?