Update: 18 October 2020
There is now an official fork of Laravel Breadcrumbs:
https://github.com/diglactic/laravel-breadcrumbs
Blog post:
https://newsroom.diglactic.com/laravel-breadcrumbs/
Thanks to Sheng Slogar of Diglactic for volunteering to take this project forward.
— Dave
As of 18 April 2020, Laravel Breadcrumbs is not being maintained.
It will probably keep working for a while - I removed the version constraint from composer.json
, so it will keep working until a future version of Laravel makes breaking changes.
If you want to create your own fork, to fix bugs or add new features, please see the instructions below. The MIT license requires you to keep the copyright notice and license information, but otherwise you can do what you like with the code and documentation.
Thanks to the contributors who helped maintain it and add features over the last 7 years - I just don't have the energy for maintaining open source projects (or writing blog posts, or for social media) that I did in 2013, and I've decided it's time to focus on new projects instead.
— Dave
A simple Laravel-style way to create breadcrumbs.
- Compatibility Chart
- Getting Started
- Defining Breadcrumbs
- Custom Templates
- Outputting Breadcrumbs
- Structured Data
- Route-Bound Breadcrumbs
- Advanced Usage
- API Reference
- FAQ
- Troubleshooting
- Contributing
- No Technical Support
- Changelog
- License
Laravel Breadcrumbs | Laravel | PHP |
---|---|---|
5.3.2 | 5.6+ | 7.1+ |
5.3.0 – 5.3.1 | 5.6 – 6.x | 7.1+ |
5.2.1 | 5.6 – 5.8 | 7.1+ |
5.1.1 – 5.2.0 | 5.6 – 5.7 | 7.1+ |
5.0.0 – 5.1.0 | 5.6 | 7.1+ |
4.x | 5.5 | 7.0+ |
3.x | 5.0 – 5.4 | 5.4+ |
2.x | 4.0 – 4.2 | 5.3+ |
Note: If you are using an older version, click it in the table above to see the documentation for that version.
Note 2: If you think this documentation can be improved in any way, please edit this file and make a pull request.
Run this at the command line:
composer require davejamesmiller/laravel-breadcrumbs:5.x
This will update composer.json
and install the package into the vendor/
directory.
Create a file called routes/breadcrumbs.php
that looks like this:
<?php
// Home
Breadcrumbs::for('home', function ($trail) {
$trail->push('Home', route('home'));
});
// Home > About
Breadcrumbs::for('about', function ($trail) {
$trail->parent('home');
$trail->push('About', route('about'));
});
// Home > Blog
Breadcrumbs::for('blog', function ($trail) {
$trail->parent('home');
$trail->push('Blog', route('blog'));
});
// Home > Blog > [Category]
Breadcrumbs::for('category', function ($trail, $category) {
$trail->parent('blog');
$trail->push($category->title, route('category', $category->id));
});
// Home > Blog > [Category] > [Post]
Breadcrumbs::for('post', function ($trail, $post) {
$trail->parent('category', $post->category);
$trail->push($post->title, route('post', $post->id));
});
See the Defining Breadcrumbs section for more details.
By default a Bootstrap-compatible ordered list will be rendered, so if you're using Bootstrap 4 you can skip this step.
First initialise the config file by running this command:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=breadcrumbs-config
Then open config/breadcrumbs.php
and edit this line:
'view' => 'breadcrumbs::bootstrap4',
The possible values are:
breadcrumbs::bootstrap4
– Bootstrap 4breadcrumbs::bootstrap3
– Bootstrap 3breadcrumbs::bootstrap2
– Bootstrap 2breadcrumbs::bulma
– Bulmabreadcrumbs::foundation6
– Foundation 6breadcrumbs::materialize
– Materializebreadcrumbs::uikit
– UIkitbreadcrumbs::json-ld
– JSON-LD Structured Data (<script> tag, no visible output)- The path to a custom view: e.g.
partials.breadcrumbs
See the Custom Templates section for more details.
Finally, call Breadcrumbs::render()
in the view for each page, passing it the name of the breadcrumb to use and any additional parameters – for example:
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('home') }}
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('category', $category) }}
See the Outputting Breadcrumbs section for other output options, and see Route-Bound Breadcrumbs for a way to link breadcrumb names to route names automatically.
Breadcrumbs will usually correspond to actions or types of page. For each breadcrumb you specify a name, the breadcrumb title and the URL to link it to. Since these are likely to change dynamically, you do this in a closure, and you pass any variables you need into the closure.
The following examples should make it clear:
The most simple breadcrumb is probably going to be your homepage, which will look something like this:
Breadcrumbs::for('home', function ($trail) {
$trail->push('Home', route('home'));
});
As you can see, you simply call $trail->push($title, $url)
inside the closure.
For generating the URL, you can use any of the standard Laravel URL-generation methods, including:
url('path/to/route')
(URL::to()
)secure_url('path/to/route')
route('routename')
orroute('routename', 'param')
orroute('routename', ['param1', 'param2'])
(URL::route()
)action('controller@action')
(URL::action()
)- Or just pass a string URL (
'http://www.example.com/'
)
This example would be rendered like this:
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('home') }}
And results in this output:
Home
This is another static page, but this has a parent link before it:
Breadcrumbs::for('blog', function ($trail) {
$trail->parent('home');
$trail->push('Blog', route('blog'));
});
It works by calling the closure for the home
breadcrumb defined above.
It would be rendered like this:
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('blog') }}
And results in this output:
Home / Blog
Note that the default templates do not create a link for the last breadcrumb (the one for the current page), even when a URL is specified. You can override this by creating your own template – see Custom Templates for more details.
This is a dynamically generated page pulled from the database:
Breadcrumbs::for('post', function ($trail, $post) {
$trail->parent('blog');
$trail->push($post->title, route('post', $post));
});
The $post
object (probably an Eloquent model, but could be anything) would simply be passed in from the view:
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('post', $post) }}
It results in this output:
Tip: You can pass multiple parameters if necessary.
Finally, if you have nested categories or other special requirements, you can call $trail->push()
multiple times:
Breadcrumbs::for('category', function ($trail, $category) {
$trail->parent('blog');
foreach ($category->ancestors as $ancestor) {
$trail->push($ancestor->title, route('category', $ancestor->id));
}
$trail->push($category->title, route('category', $category->id));
});
Alternatively you could make a recursive function such as this:
Breadcrumbs::for('category', function ($trail, $category) {
if ($category->parent) {
$trail->parent('category', $category->parent);
} else {
$trail->parent('blog');
}
$trail->push($category->title, route('category', $category->slug));
});
Both would be rendered like this:
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('category', $category) }}
And result in this:
Home / Blog / Grandparent Category / Parent Category / Category Title
To customise the HTML, create your own view file (e.g. resources/views/partials/breadcrumbs.blade.php
) like this:
@if (count($breadcrumbs))
<ol class="breadcrumb">
@foreach ($breadcrumbs as $breadcrumb)
@if ($breadcrumb->url && !$loop->last)
<li class="breadcrumb-item"><a href="{{ $breadcrumb->url }}">{{ $breadcrumb->title }}</a></li>
@else
<li class="breadcrumb-item active">{{ $breadcrumb->title }}</li>
@endif
@endforeach
</ol>
@endif
(See the views/ directory for the built-in templates.)
The view will receive an array called $breadcrumbs
.
Each breadcrumb is an object with the following keys:
title
– The breadcrumb titleurl
– The breadcrumb URL, ornull
if none was given- Plus additional keys for each item in
$data
(see Custom data)
Then update your config file (config/breadcrumbs.php
) with the custom view name, e.g.:
'view' => 'partials.breadcrumbs', #--> resources/views/partials/breadcrumbs.blade.php
Alternatively you can skip the custom view and call Breadcrumbs::generate()
to get the breadcrumbs Collection directly:
@foreach (Breadcrumbs::generate('post', $post) as $breadcrumb)
{{-- ... --}}
@endforeach
Call Breadcrumbs::render()
in the view for each page, passing it the name of the breadcrumb to use and any additional parameters.
In the page (e.g. resources/views/home.blade.php
):
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('home') }}
Or with a parameter:
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('category', $category) }}
In the page (e.g. resources/views/home.blade.php
):
@extends('layout.name')
@section('breadcrumbs')
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('home') }}
@endsection
Or using the shorthand syntax:
@extends('layout.name')
@section('breadcrumbs', Breadcrumbs::render('home'))
And in the layout (e.g. resources/views/layout/name.blade.php
):
@yield('breadcrumbs')
In the page (e.g. resources/views/home.php
):
<?= Breadcrumbs::render('home') ?>
Or use the longhand syntax if you prefer:
<?php echo Breadcrumbs::render('home') ?>
To render breadcrumbs as JSON-LD structured data (usually for SEO reasons), use Breadcrumbs::view()
to render the breadcrumbs::json-ld
template in addition to the normal one. For example:
<html>
<head>
...
{{ Breadcrumbs::view('breadcrumbs::json-ld', 'category', $category) }}
...
</head>
<body>
...
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('category', $category) }}
...
</body>
</html>
(Note: If you use Laravel Page Speed you may need to disable the TrimUrls
middleware.)
To specify an image, add it to the $data
parameter in push()
:
Breadcrumbs::for('post', function ($trail, $post) {
$trail->parent('home');
$trail->push($post->title, route('post', $post), ['image' => asset($post->image)]);
});
(If you prefer to use Microdata or RDFa you will need to create a custom template.)
In normal usage you must call Breadcrumbs::render($name, $params...)
to render the breadcrumbs on every page. If you prefer, you can name your breadcrumbs the same as your routes and avoid this duplication...
Make sure each of your routes has a name. For example (routes/web.php
):
// Home
Route::name('home')->get('/', 'HomeController@index');
// Home > [Post]
Route::name('post')->get('/post/{id}', 'PostController@show');
For more details see Named Routes in the Laravel documentation.
For each route, create a breadcrumb with the same name and parameters. For example (routes/breadcrumbs.php
):
// Home
Breadcrumbs::for('home', function ($trail) {
$trail->push('Home', route('home'));
});
// Home > [Post]
Breadcrumbs::for('post', function ($trail, $id) {
$post = Post::findOrFail($id);
$trail->parent('home');
$trail->push($post->title, route('post', $post));
});
To add breadcrumbs to a custom 404 Not Found page, use the name errors.404
:
// Error 404
Breadcrumbs::for('errors.404', function ($trail) {
$trail->parent('home');
$trail->push('Page Not Found');
});
Call Breadcrumbs::render()
with no parameters in your layout file (e.g. resources/views/app.blade.php
):
{{ Breadcrumbs::render() }}
This will automatically output breadcrumbs corresponding to the current route. The same applies to Breadcrumbs::generate()
:
$breadcrumbs = Breadcrumbs::generate();
And to Breadcrumbs::view()
:
{{ Breadcrumbs::view('breadcrumbs::json-ld') }}
It will throw an InvalidBreadcrumbException
if the breadcrumb doesn't exist, to remind you to create one. To disable this (e.g. if you have some pages with no breadcrumbs), first initialise the config file, if you haven't already:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=breadcrumbs-config
Then open config/breadcrumbs.php
and set this value:
'missing-route-bound-breadcrumb-exception' => false,
Similarly, to prevent it throwing an UnnamedRouteException
if the current route doesn't have a name, set this value:
'unnamed-route-exception' => false,
Laravel Breadcrumbs uses the same model binding as the controller. For example:
// routes/web.php
Route::name('post')->get('/post/{post}', 'PostController@show');
// app/Http/Controllers/PostController.php
use App\Post;
class PostController extends Controller
{
public function show(Post $post) // <-- Implicit model binding happens here
{
return view('post/show', ['post' => $post]);
}
}
// routes/breadcrumbs.php
Breadcrumbs::for('post', function ($trail, $post) { // <-- The same Post model is injected here
$trail->parent('home');
$trail->push($post->title, route('post', $post));
});
This makes your code less verbose and more efficient by only loading the post from the database once.
For more details see Route Model Binding in the Laravel documentation.
Laravel automatically creates route names for resourceful controllers, e.g. photo.index
, which you can use when defining your breadcrumbs. For example:
// routes/web.php
Route::resource('photo', PhotoController::class);
$ php artisan route:list
+--------+----------+--------------------+---------------+-------------------------+------------+
| Domain | Method | URI | Name | Action | Middleware |
+--------+----------+--------------------+---------------+-------------------------+------------+
| | GET|HEAD | photo | photo.index | PhotoController@index | |
| | GET|HEAD | photo/create | photo.create | PhotoController@create | |
| | POST | photo | photo.store | PhotoController@store | |
| | GET|HEAD | photo/{photo} | photo.show | PhotoController@show | |
| | GET|HEAD | photo/{photo}/edit | photo.edit | PhotoController@edit | |
| | PUT | photo/{photo} | photo.update | PhotoController@update | |
| | PATCH | photo/{photo} | | PhotoController@update | |
| | DELETE | photo/{photo} | photo.destroy | PhotoController@destroy | |
+--------+----------+--------------------+---------------+-------------------------+------------+
// routes/breadcrumbs.php
// Photos
Breadcrumbs::for('photo.index', function ($trail) {
$trail->parent('home');
$trail->push('Photos', route('photo.index'));
});
// Photos > Upload Photo
Breadcrumbs::for('photo.create', function ($trail) {
$trail->parent('photo.index');
$trail->push('Upload Photo', route('photo.create'));
});
// Photos > [Photo Name]
Breadcrumbs::for('photo.show', function ($trail, $photo) {
$trail->parent('photo.index');
$trail->push($photo->title, route('photo.show', $photo->id));
});
// Photos > [Photo Name] > Edit Photo
Breadcrumbs::for('photo.edit', function ($trail, $photo) {
$trail->parent('photo.show', $photo);
$trail->push('Edit Photo', route('photo.edit', $photo->id));
});
For more details see Resource Controllers in the Laravel documentation.
(Related FAQ: Why is there no Breadcrumbs::resource() method?.)
The second parameter to push()
is optional, so if you want a breadcrumb with no URL you can do so:
$trail->push('Sample');
The $breadcrumb->url
value will be null
.
The default Bootstrap templates provided render this with a CSS class of "active", the same as the last breadcrumb, because otherwise they default to black text not grey which doesn't look right.
The push()
method accepts an optional third parameter, $data
– an array of arbitrary data to be passed to the breadcrumb, which you can use in your custom template. For example, if you wanted each breadcrumb to have an icon, you could do:
$trail->push('Home', '/', ['icon' => 'home.png']);
The $data
array's entries will be merged into the breadcrumb as properties, so you would access the icon as $breadcrumb->icon
in your template, like this:
<li><a href="{{ $breadcrumb->url }}">
<img src="/images/icons/{{ $breadcrumb->icon }}">
{{ $breadcrumb->title }}
</a></li>
Do not use the keys title
or url
as they will be overwritten.
You can register "before" and "after" callbacks to add breadcrumbs at the start/end of the trail. For example, to automatically add the current page number at the end:
Breadcrumbs::after(function ($trail) {
$page = (int) request('page', 1);
if ($page > 1) {
$trail->push("Page $page");
}
});
To get the last breadcrumb for the current page, use Breadcrumb::current()
. For example, you could use this to output the current page title:
<title>{{ ($breadcrumb = Breadcrumbs::current()) ? $breadcrumb->title : 'Fallback Title' }}</title>
To ignore a breadcrumb, add 'current' => false
to the $data
parameter in push()
. This can be useful to ignore pagination breadcrumbs:
Breadcrumbs::after(function ($trail) {
$page = (int) request('page', 1);
if ($page > 1) {
$trail->push("Page $page", null, ['current' => false]);
}
});
<title>
{{ ($breadcrumb = Breadcrumbs::current()) ? "$breadcrumb->title –" : '' }}
{{ ($page = (int) request('page')) > 1 ? "Page $page –" : '' }}
Demo App
</title>
For more advanced filtering, use Breadcrumbs::generate()
and Laravel's Collection class methods instead:
$current = Breadcrumbs::generate()->where('current', '!==', 'false)->last();
You can use Breadcrumbs::view()
in place of Breadcrumbs::render()
to render a template other than the default one:
{{ Breadcrumbs::view('partials.breadcrumbs2', 'category', $category) }}
Or you can override the config setting to affect all future render()
calls:
Config::set('breadcrumbs.view', 'partials.breadcrumbs2');
{{ Breadcrumbs::render('category', $category) }}
Or you could call Breadcrumbs::generate()
to get the breadcrumbs Collection and load the view manually:
@include('partials.breadcrumbs2', ['breadcrumbs' => Breadcrumbs::generate('category', $category)])
If you call Breadcrumbs::render()
or Breadcrumbs::generate()
with no parameters, it will use the current route name and parameters by default (as returned by Laravel's Route::current()
method).
You can override this by calling Breadcrumbs::setCurrentRoute($name, $param1, $param2...)
.
To check if a breadcrumb with a given name exists, call Breadcrumbs::exists('name')
, which returns a boolean.
If you don't want to use routes/breadcrumbs.php
, you can change it in the config file. First initialise the config file, if you haven't already:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=breadcrumbs-config
Then open config/breadcrumbs.php
and edit this line:
'files' => base_path('routes/breadcrumbs.php'),
It can be an absolute path, as above, or an array:
'files' => [
base_path('breadcrumbs/admin.php'),
base_path('breadcrumbs/frontend.php'),
],
So you can use glob()
to automatically find files using a wildcard:
'files' => glob(base_path('breadcrumbs/*.php')),
Or return an empty array []
to disable loading.
If you are creating your own package, simply load your breadcrumbs file from your service provider's boot()
method:
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class MyServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
public function register() {}
public function boot()
{
if (class_exists('Breadcrumbs')) {
require __DIR__ . '/breadcrumbs.php';
}
}
}
You can use dependency injection to access the BreadcrumbsManager
instance if you prefer, instead of using the Breadcrumbs::
facade:
use DaveJamesMiller\Breadcrumbs\BreadcrumbsManager;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class MyServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
public function register() {}
public function boot(BreadcrumbsManager $breadcrumbs)
{
$breadcrumbs->register(...);
}
}
The BreadcrumbsManager class is macroable, so you can add your own methods. For example:
Breadcrumbs::macro('pageTitle', function () {
$title = ($breadcrumb = Breadcrumbs::current()) ? "{$breadcrumb->title} – " : '';
if (($page = (int) request('page')) > 1) {
$title .= "Page $page – ";
}
return $title . 'Demo App';
});
<title>{{ Breadcrumbs::pageTitle() }}</title>
For more advanced customisations you can subclass BreadcrumbsManager and/or BreadcrumbsGenerator, then update the config file with the new class name:
// Manager
'manager-class' => DaveJamesMiller\Breadcrumbs\BreadcrumbsManager::class,
// Generator
'generator-class' => DaveJamesMiller\Breadcrumbs\BreadcrumbsGenerator::class,
(Note: Anything that's not part of the public API (see below) may change between releases, so I suggest you write unit tests to ensure it doesn't break when upgrading.)
Method | Returns | Added in |
---|---|---|
Breadcrumbs::for(string $name, closure $callback) |
void | 5.1.0 |
Breadcrumbs::register(string $name, closure $callback) |
void | 1.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::before(closure $callback) |
void | 4.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::after(closure $callback) |
void | 4.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::exists() |
boolean | 2.2.0 |
Breadcrumbs::exists(string $name) |
boolean | 2.2.0 |
Breadcrumbs::generate() |
Collection | 2.2.3 |
Breadcrumbs::generate(string $name) |
Collection | 1.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::generate(string $name, mixed $param1, ...) |
Collection | 1.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::render() |
string | 2.2.0 |
Breadcrumbs::render(string $name) |
string | 1.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::render(string $name, mixed $param1, ...) |
string | 1.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::view(string $view) |
string | 4.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::view(string $view, string $name) |
string | 4.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::view(string $view, string $name, mixed $param1, ...) |
string | 4.0.0 |
Breadcrumbs::setCurrentRoute(string $name) |
void | 2.2.0 |
Breadcrumbs::setCurrentRoute(string $name, mixed $param1, ...) |
void | 2.2.0 |
Breadcrumbs::clearCurrentRoute() |
void | 2.2.0 |
use App\Models\Post;
use DaveJamesMiller\Breadcrumbs\BreadcrumbsGenerator;
Breadcrumbs::before(function (BreadcrumbsGenerator $trail) {
// ...
});
Breadcrumbs::for('name', function (BreadcrumbsGenerator $trail, Post $post) {
// ...
});
Breadcrumbs::after(function (BreadcrumbsGenerator $trail) {
// ...
});
Method | Returns | Added in |
---|---|---|
$trail->push(string $title) |
void | 1.0.0 |
$trail->push(string $title, string $url) |
void | 1.0.0 |
$trail->push(string $title, string $url, array $data) |
void | 2.3.0 |
$trail->parent(string $name) |
void | 1.0.0 |
$trail->parent(string $name, mixed $param1, ...) |
void | 1.0.0 |
@foreach ($breadcrumbs as $breadcrumb)
{{-- ... --}}
@endforeach
Variable | Type | Added in |
---|---|---|
$breadcrumb->title |
string | 1.0.0 |
$breadcrumb->url |
string / null | 1.0.0 |
$breadcrumb->custom_attribute_name |
mixed | 2.3.0 |
config/breadcrumbs.php
Setting | Type | Added in |
---|---|---|
view |
string | 2.0.0 |
files |
string / array | 4.0.0 |
unnamed-route-exception |
boolean | 4.0.0 |
missing-route-bound-breadcrumb-exception |
boolean | 4.0.0 |
invalid-named-breadcrumb-exception |
boolean | 4.0.0 |
manager-class |
string | 4.2.0 |
generator-class |
string | 4.2.0 |
Since version 5.3.2, there is no maximum version of Laravel specified in composer.json, so most of the time it will just work.
If it breaks for any reason, it will be fixed when (1) someone submits a pull request to fix it, or (2) I decide to upgrade my own applications - whichever comes first. In practice it's usually the former because I don't generally upgrade on day 1.
A few people have suggested adding Breadcrumbs::resource()
to match Route::resource()
, but no-one has come up with a good implementation that (a) is flexible enough to deal with translations, nested resources, etc., and (b) isn't overly complex as a result.
Personally I don't think there is a good all-round solution, so instead I recommend adding your own using Breadcrumbs::macro()
. Here's a starting point:
Breadcrumbs::macro('resource', function ($name, $title) {
// Home > Blog
Breadcrumbs::for("$name.index", function ($trail) use ($name, $title) {
$trail->parent('home');
$trail->push($title, route("$name.index"));
});
// Home > Blog > New
Breadcrumbs::for("$name.create", function ($trail) use ($name) {
$trail->parent("$name.index");
$trail->push('New', route("$name.create"));
});
// Home > Blog > Post 123
Breadcrumbs::for("$name.show", function ($trail, $model) use ($name) {
$trail->parent("$name.index");
$trail->push($model->title, route("$name.show", $model));
});
// Home > Blog > Post 123 > Edit
Breadcrumbs::for("$name.edit", function ($trail, $model) use ($name) {
$trail->parent("$name.show", $model);
$trail->push('Edit', route("$name.edit", $model));
});
});
Breadcrumbs::resource('blog', 'Blog');
Breadcrumbs::resource('photos', 'Photos');
Breadcrumbs::resource('users', 'Users');
Note that this doesn't deal with translations or nested resources, and it assumes that all models have a title
attribute (which users probably don't). Adapt it however you see fit.
- Re-read the instructions and make sure you did everything correctly.
- Start with the simple options and only use the advanced options (e.g. Route-Bound Breadcrumbs) once you understand how it works.
- Try running
composer update davejamesmiller/laravel-breadcrumbs
to upgrade. - Try running
php artisan package:discover
to ensure the service provider is detected by Laravel.
- Make sure you register the breadcrumbs in the right place (
routes/breadcrumbs.php
by default).- Try putting
dd(__FILE__)
in the file to make sure it's loaded. - Try putting
dd($files)
inBreadcrumbsServiceProvider::registerBreadcrumbs()
to check the path is correct. - If not, try running
php artisan config:clear
(or manually deletebootstrap/cache/config.php
) or update the path inconfig/breadcrumbs.php
.
- Try putting
- Make sure the breadcrumb name is correct.
- If using Route-Bound Breadcrumbs, make sure it matches the route name exactly.
- To suppress these errors when using Route-Bound Breadcrumbs (if you don't want breadcrumbs on some pages), either:
- Register them with an empty closure (no push/parent calls), or
- Set
missing-route-bound-breadcrumb-exception
tofalse
in the config file to disable the check (but you won't be warned if you miss any pages).
- Make sure the path is correct.
- If so, check the file ownership & permissions are correct.
- If not, try running
php artisan config:clear
(or manually deletebootstrap/cache/config.php
) or update the path inconfig/breadcrumbs.php
.
- Make sure you use
{{ Breadcrumbs::render() }}
or{{ Breadcrumbs::view() }}
, not@include()
.
- You're probably using a version older than 5.1 - use
Breadcrumbs::register()
instead ofBreadcrumbs::for()
(or upgrade).
Sorry I wasn't able to help this time, but once you have solved your problem, please edit this file with the solution to help the next person!
Documentation: If you think the documentation can be improved in any way, please do edit this file and make a pull request.
Bug fixes: Please fix it and open a pull request. (See below for more detailed instructions.) Bonus points if you add a unit test to make sure it doesn't happen again!
New features: Only features with a clear use case and well-considered API will be accepted. They must be documented and include unit tests. If in doubt, make a proof-of-concept (either code or documentation) and open a pull request to discuss the details. (Tip: If you want a feature that's too specific to be included by default, see Macros or Advanced customisations for ways to add them.)
The easiest way to work on Laravel Breadcrumbs is to tell Composer to install it from source (Git) using the --prefer-source
flag:
rm -rf vendor/davejamesmiller/laravel-breadcrumbs
composer install --prefer-source
Then checkout the master branch and create your own local branch to work on:
cd vendor/davejamesmiller/laravel-breadcrumbs
git checkout -t origin/master
git checkout -b YOUR_BRANCH
Now make your changes, including unit tests and documentation (if appropriate). Run the unit tests to make sure everything is still working:
scripts/test.sh
Then commit the changes. Fork the repository on GitHub if you haven't already, and push your changes to it:
git remote add YOUR_USERNAME [email protected]:YOUR_USERNAME/laravel-breadcrumbs.git
git push -u YOUR_USERNAME YOUR_BRANCH
Finally, browse to the repository on GitHub and create a pull request.
(Alternatively, there is a test app that you can use.)
To use your own fork in a project, update the composer.json
in your main project as follows:
{
// ADD THIS:
"repositories": [
{
"type": "vcs",
"url": "https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/laravel-breadcrumbs.git"
}
],
"require": {
// UPDATE THIS:
"davejamesmiller/laravel-breadcrumbs": "dev-YOUR_BRANCH"
}
}
Replace YOUR_USERNAME
with your GitHub username and YOUR_BRANCH
with the branch name (e.g. develop
). This tells Composer to use your repository instead of the default one.
To run the unit tests:
scripts/test.sh
To check code coverage:
scripts/test-coverage.sh
Then open test-coverage/index.html
to view the results. Be aware of the edge cases in PHPUnit that can make it not-quite-accurate.
There is no maximum version specified in composer.json
, so there is no need for a new version of Laravel Breadcrumbs to be released every 6 months. However, this file will need to be updated to run tests against the new version:
.travis.yml
matrix
(Laravel versions)php
(PHP versions)exclude
(Unsupported combinations)
If changes are required, also update:
If backwards-incompatible changes cause the minimum supported versions of Laravel or PHP to change, update:
composer.json
php/*
illuminate/*
This section is for maintainers only.
- Ensure the unit tests are updated and have 100% coverage
- Update the test app, if appropriate, and test it manually
- Ensure the README is up to date, including:
- Document any new features
- Compatibility Chart
- Changelog
- Merge the changes into the
master
branch (if necessary) - Push the code changes to GitHub (
git push
) - Make sure all tests are passing
- Tag the release (
git tag 1.2.3
) - Push the tag (
git push --tag
)
Sorry, I don't offer any technical support, and GitHub Issues are disabled. That means I won't figure out why it's not working for you, I won't fix bugs for you, and I won't write new features on request - this is free software after all.
But the beauty of open source is you can do whatever you want with it! You can fork it, fix it, improve it and extend it. If you don't want to maintain your own fork, and you think other people would benefit from your changes, you can submit a pull request to have your changes included in the next release.
If you get really stuck, I suggest you:
- Read and re-read both this file and the Laravel documentation to see if you missed something.
- Dive into the source code and spend some time figuring out how it's meant to work and what's actually happening.
- Try to reproduce the problem on a brand new Laravel project, in case it's an incompatibility with another package or your other code.
- Ask your colleagues to help you debug it, if you work in a team.
- Pay someone more experienced to help you (or if you work for a company, ask your boss to pay them).
- Try posting on Stack Overflow, Laravel.io Forum or Laracasts Forum (but I can't promise anyone will answer - they don't get paid either).
- Use a different package instead.
- Write your own.
Laravel Breadcrumbs uses Semantic Versioning.
v5.3.2 (Mon 30 Dec 2019)
- Remove the maximum Laravel version constraint from composer.json, to support Laravel 7+ without requiring a new release every 6 months
v5.3.1 (Sun 20 Oct 2019)
- Add a docblock to the
Breadcrumbs
facade (alternative to IDE Helper – thanks to Alexandr Chernyaev)
v5.3.0 (Tue 3 Sep 2019)
- Add Laravel 6.x support
- Add Laravel Ignition suggested solutions
- Change
vendor:publish
tag fromconfig
tobreadcrumbs-config
to match Horizon & Telescope and simplify the command
v5.2.1 (Wed 27 Feb 2019)
- Add Laravel 5.8 support (thanks to Andrew Dabich)
v5.2.0 (Tue 30 Oct 2018)
- Add UIkit template (
breadcrumbs::uikit
) (#198 by PieterHollevoet)
v5.1.2 (Fri 14 Sep 2018)
- Update default config file with the full list of available views
v5.1.1 (Wed 5 Sep 2018)
- Add Laravel 5.7 support
v5.1.0 (Sat 5 May 2018)
- Add
Breadcrumbs::for($name, $callback)
as an alias forBreadcrumbs::register($name, $callback)
- Renamed
$breadcrumbs
to$trail
in documentation (this doesn't affect the code)
These changes were inspired by (read: taken directly from) Dwight Watson's Breadcrumbs package.
No changes are required, but I recommend updating your routes/breadcrumbs.php
to match the new documentation:
- Replace
Breadcrumbs::register
withBreadcrumbs::for
- Replace
$breadcrumbs
with$trail
v5.0.0 (Sat 10 Feb 2018)
- Add Laravel 5.6 support, and drop support for Laravel 5.5
- Drop PHP 7.0 support (add
void
return type hint, and use[]
instead oflist()
) - Fix class names in PhpDoc for
Breadcrumbs
facade when using IDE Helper
- Upgrade to Laravel 5.6 (requires PHP 7.1.3+)
- If you are extending any classes, add
: void
return type hints where needed.
Copyright © 2013-2019 Dave James Miller
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.