The RabbitEvents Publisher component provides an API for publishing events across the application structure. More information is available in the Nuwber's RabbitEvents documentation.
The RabbitEvents Publisher is the part that informs all other microservices that a payment has succeeded.
RabbitEvents Publisher can be installed via the Composer package manager:
composer require rabbitevents/publisher
After installing Publisher, you can execute the rabbitevents:install
Artisan command, which will install the RabbitEvents configuration file into your application:
php artisan rabbitevents:install
Details about the configuration are described in the library documentation.
Here is an example event class:
<?php
use App\Payment;
use App\User;
use RabbitEvents\Publisher\ShouldPublish;
use RabbitEvents\Publisher\Support\Publishable;
class PaymentSucceededRabbitEvent implements ShouldPublish
{
use Publishable;
public function __construct(private User $user, private Payment $payment)
{
}
public function publishEventKey(): string
{
return 'payment.succeeded';
}
public function toPublish(): mixed
{
return [
'user' => $this->user->toArray(),
'payment' => $this->payment->toArray(),
];
}
}
The only requirement for event classes is to implement the \RabbitEvents\Publisher\ShouldPublish
interface.
As an alternative, you could extend \RabbitEvents\Publisher\Support\AbstractPublishableEvent
. This class was created to simplify the creation of event classes.
To publish this event, you just need to call the publish
method of the event class and pass all the necessary data:
<?php
$payment = new Payment(...);
// ...
PaymentSucceededRabbitEvent::publish($request->user(), $payment);
The method publish
is provided by the trait Publishable
.
Sometimes, it is easier to use the helper function publish
with an event key and payload:
<?php
publish(
'payment.succeeded',
[
'user' => $request->user()->toArray(),
'payment' => $payment->toArray(),
]
);
You can also use a combination of the two previous methods:
<?php
$event = new PaymentSucceededEvent($request->user(), $payment);
event($event)
publish($event);
We always write tests. Tests in our applications contain many mocks and fakes to test how events are published.
There is the PublishableEventTesting
trait that provides assertion methods in an Event class that you want to test.
Event.php
<?php
namespace App\BroadcastEvents;
use Nuwber\Events\Event\Publishable;
use Nuwber\Events\Event\ShouldPublish;
use Nuwber\Events\Event\Testing\PublishableEventTesting;
class Event implements ShouldPublish
{
use Publishable;
use PublishableEventTesting;
public function __construct(private array $payload)
{
}
public function publishEventKey(): string
{
return 'something.happened';
}
public function toPublish(): array
{
return $this->payload;
}
}
Test.php
<?php
use \App\RabbitEvents\Event;
use \App\RabbitEvents\AnotherEvent;
Event::fake();
$payload = [
'key1' => 'value1',
'key2' => 'value2',
];
Event::publish($payload);
Event::assertPublished('something.happened', $payload);
AnotherEvent::assertNotPublished();
If the assertion does not pass, Mockery\Exception\InvalidCountException
will be thrown.
Don't forget to call \Mockery::close()
in tearDown
or similar methods of your tests.