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When using any tool in the "real world", you feel more confident if you understand how that tool works. Application development is no different. When you understand how your development tools function, you feel more comfortable and confident using them.
The goal of this document is to give you a good, high-level overview of how the Laravel framework works. By getting to know the overall framework better, everything feels less "magical" and you will be more confident building your applications. If you don't understand all of the terms right away, don't lose heart! Just try to get a basic grasp of what is going on, and your knowledge will grow as you explore other sections of the documentation.
The entry point for all requests to a Laravel application is the public/index.php
file. All requests are directed to this file by your web server (Apache / Nginx) configuration. The index.php
file doesn't contain much code. Rather, it is a starting point for loading the rest of the framework.
The index.php
file loads the Composer generated autoloader definition, and then retrieves an instance of the Laravel application from bootstrap/app.php
. The first action taken by Laravel itself is to create an instance of the application / service container.
Next, the incoming request is sent to either the HTTP kernel or the console kernel, depending on the type of request that is entering the application. These two kernels serve as the central location that all requests flow through. For now, let's just focus on the HTTP kernel, which is located in app/Http/Kernel.php
.
The HTTP kernel extends the Illuminate\Foundation\Http\Kernel
class, which defines an array of bootstrappers
that will be run before the request is executed. These bootstrappers configure error handling, configure logging, detect the application environment, and perform other tasks that need to be done before the request is actually handled. Typically, these classes handle internal Laravel configuration that you do not need to worry about.
The HTTP kernel also defines a list of HTTP middleware that all requests must pass through before being handled by the application. These middleware handle reading and writing the HTTP session, determining if the application is in maintenance mode, verifying the CSRF token, and more. We'll talk more about these soon.
The method signature for the HTTP kernel's handle
method is quite simple: it receives a Request
and returns a Response
. Think of the kernel as being a big black box that represents your entire application. Feed it HTTP requests and it will return HTTP responses.
One of the most important kernel bootstrapping actions is loading the service providers for your application. All of the service providers for the application are configured in the config/app.php
configuration file's providers
array.
Laravel will iterate through this list of providers and instantiate each of them. After instantiating the providers, the register
method will be called on all of the providers. Then, once all of the providers have been registered, the boot
method will be called on each provider. This is so service providers may depend on every container binding being registered and available by the time their boot
method is executed.
Service providers are responsible for bootstrapping all of the framework's various components, such as the database, queue, validation, and routing components. Essentially every major feature offered by Laravel is bootstrapped and configured by a service provider. Since they bootstrap and configure so many features offered by the framework, service providers are the most important aspect of the entire Laravel bootstrap process.
One of the most important service providers in your application is the App\Providers\RouteServiceProvider
. This service provider loads the route files contained within your application's routes
directory. Go ahead, crack open the RouteServiceProvider
code and take a look at how it works!
Once the application has been bootstrapped and all service providers have been registered, the Request
will be handed off to the router for dispatching. The router will dispatch the request to a route or controller, as well as run any route specific middleware.
Middleware provide a convenient mechanism for filtering or examining HTTP requests entering your application. For example, Laravel includes a middleware that verifies if the user of your application is authenticated. If the user is not authenticated, the middleware will redirect the user to the login screen. However, if the user is authenticated, the middleware will allow the request to proceed further into the application. Some middleware are assigned to all routes within the application, like those defined in the $middleware
property of your HTTP kernel, while some are only assigned to specific routes or route groups. You can learn more about middleware by reading the complete middleware documentation.
If the request passes through all of the matched route's assigned middleware, the route or controller method will be executed and the response returned by the route or controller method will be sent back through the route's chain of middleware.
Once the route or controller method returns a response, the response will travel back outward through the route's middleware, giving the application a chance to modify or examine the outgoing response.
Finally, once the response travels back through the middleware, the HTTP kernel's handle
method returns the response object and the index.php
file calls the send
method on the returned response. The send
method sends the response content to the user's web browser. We've finished our journey through the entire Laravel request lifecycle!
Service providers are truly the key to bootstrapping a Laravel application. The application instance is created, the service providers are registered, and the request is handed to the bootstrapped application. It's really that simple!
Having a firm grasp of how a Laravel application is built and bootstrapped via service providers is very valuable. Your application's default service providers are stored in the app/Providers
directory.
By default, the AppServiceProvider
is fairly empty. This provider is a great place to add your application's own bootstrapping and service container bindings. For large applications, you may wish to create several service providers, each with more granular bootstrapping for specific services used by your application.