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In the next release of Laravel 8, you can strictly disable lazy loading entirely, resulting in an exception:
Preventing lazy loading in development can help you catch N+1 bugs earlier on in the development process. The Laravel ecosystem has various tools to identify N+1 queries. However, this approach brings the issue front-and-center by throwing an exception.
Let’s walk through this feature real quick by spinning up a development version of the framework 8.x branch since this feature is not out yet at the time of writing. Once released, you will have this feature without switching to the latest 8.x branch.
First, create a new application:
laravel new strict-lazy-demo
Next, we’ll update the laravel/framework version in composer.json to make sure we have this feature (if you’re trying it out before the next release) by adjusting the version to 8.x-dev:
{ "require": { "laravel/framework": "8.x-dev" } }
Next, run composer update to make sure you get the latest version of the code for this branch:
composer update laravel/framework
At this point, you should set up your preferred database. We like running a local MySQL instance using Laravel’s defaults of using the root user without a password. We find it convenient to use the default .env values locally to get started quickly without any configuration.
mysql -uroot -e"create database strict_lazy_demo"
Once you configure your database of choice, make sure you can migrate:
php artisan migrate:fresh
We’ll create a Post model and define a one-to-many relationship from the User model to demonstrate this feature. We’ll start by creating the Post model and accompanying files:
# Create a model with migration and factory php artisan make:model -mf Post
First, let’s define our Post migration and factory configuration:
// Your filename will differ based on when you create the file. // 2021_05_21_000013_create_posts_table.php Schema::create('posts', function (Blueprint $table) { $table->id(); $table->foreignIdFor(\App\Models\User::class); $table->string('title'); $table->longText('body'); $table->timestamps(); });
Next, define your PostFactory definition method based on the above schema:
/** * Define the model's default state. * * @return array */ public function definition() { return [ 'user_id' => \App\Models\User::factory(), 'title' => $this->faker->sentence(), 'body' => implode("\n\n", $this->faker->paragraphs(rand(2,5))), ]; }
Finally, open up the DatabaseSeeder file and add the following in the run() method:
/** * Seed the application's database. * * @return void */ public function run() { \App\Models\User::factory() ->has(\App\Models\Post::factory()->count(3)) ->create() ; }
Now that we have the migration, seeder, and model created, we are ready to associate a User with the Post model to demo this feature.
Add the following method to the User model to give the user an association with Posts:
// app/Models/User.php /** * @return \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\HasMany */ public function posts() { return $this->hasMany(Post::class); }
With that in place, we can migrate and seed the database:
php artisan migrate:fresh --seed
If all went well, we should see something like the following in the console:
We can now using tinker to inspect our seeded data and relationship:
php artisan tinker >>> $user = User::first() => App\Models\User {#4091 id: 1, name: "Nedra Hayes", email: "bruen.marc@example.com", email_verified_at: "2021-05-21 00:35:59", created_at: "2021-05-21 00:35:59", updated_at: "2021-05-21 00:35:59", } >>> $user->posts => Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Collection {#3686 all: [ App\Models\Post {#3369 id: 1, ...
The $user->posts
property actually calls the database, thus is “lazy” but is not optimized. The convenience of lazy-loading is nice, but it can come with heavy performance burdens in the long-term.
Now that we have the models set up, we can disable lazy loading across our application. You’d likely want to only disable in non-production environments, which is easy to achieve! Open up the AppServiceProvider class and add the following to the boot() method:
// app/Providers/AppServiceProvider.php public function boot() { Model::preventLazyLoading(! app()->isProduction()); }
If you run a php artisan tinker session again, this time you should get an exception for a lazy loading violation:
php artisan tinker >>> $user = \App\Models\User::first() => App\Models\User {#3685 id: 1, name: "Nedra Hayes", email: "bruen.marc@example.com", email_verified_at: "2021-05-21 00:35:59", #password: "$2y$10$92IXUNpkjO0rOQ5byMi.Ye4oKoEa3Ro9llC/.og/at2.uheWG/igi", #remember_token: "jHSxFGKOdw", created_at: "2021-05-21 00:35:59", updated_at: "2021-05-21 00:35:59", } >>> $user->posts Illuminate\Database\LazyLoadingViolationException with message 'Attempted to lazy load [posts] on model [App\Models\User] but lazy loading is disabled.'
If you want to visualize what happens if you use lazy loading in a view file, modify the default route as follows:
Route::get('/', function () { return view('welcome', [ 'user' => \App\Models\User::first() ]); });
Next, add the following somewhere in the welcome.blade.php file:
<h2>Posts</h2> @foreach($user->posts as $post) <h3>{{ $post->title }}</h3> <p> {{ $post->body }} </p> @endforeach
If you load up your application through Valet or artisan serve, you should see something like the following error page:
Though you’ll get exceptions during development, accidentally deploying code that triggers lazy-loading will continue to work as long as you set environment checking correctly in the service provider.
For more information and to develop web applications using Laravel, Hire Laravel Developer from us as we give you a high-quality product by utilizing all the latest tools and advanced technology. E-mail us any clock at – hello@hkinfosoft.com or Skype us: “hkinfosoft”.
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Content Source:
57 Sherway St,
Stoney Creek, ON
L8J 0J3
606, Suvas Scala,
S P Ring Road, Nikol,
Ahmedabad 380049
1131 Baycrest Drive,
Wesley Chapel,
FL 33544
57 Sherway St,
Stoney Creek, ON
L8J 0J3
606, Suvas Scala,
S P Ring Road, Nikol,
Ahmedabad 380049
1131 Baycrest Drive,
Wesley Chapel,
FL 33544
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