I recently put together a PHP client library for FilePreviews and immediately thought about putting together a blog post on how I’d use it. After 6 years, according to this repo, of not writing a single line of PHP, I looked into Laravel since it seems to be the rave these days. Alright, let’s get to it.

This is a step by step guide on how to use Laravel to upload files to S3, and generate previews and extract metadata using FilePreviews.io. If you are already uploading files to S3 with Laravel, check out how to integrate with FilePreviews.

Create a Laravel project

I’m assuming you’ll probably have composer already installed.

$ composer create-project laravel/laravel --prefer-dist filepreviews-laravel-example

Filesystem / Cloud Storage Setup

In this example we’ll be using AWS S3 to store our files. After you’ve got a bucket and some credentials, let’s setup the project to use them.

First we’ll add S3 support to Laravel

$ composer require league/flysystem-aws-s3-v3

Since no one want’s to commit their S3 credentials we’ll modify config/filesystems.php to use environment variables.

's3' => [ 'driver' => 's3', 'key' => env('S3_KEY'), 'secret' => env('S3_SECRET'), 'region' => env('S3_REGION'), 'bucket' => env('S3_BUCKET'), ],

Now add your corresponding credentials to your project’s .env file.

S3_KEY=YOUR_AWS_S3_ACCESS_KEY S3_SECRET=YOUR_AWS_S3_SECRET_KEY S3_REGION=us-east-1 S3_BUCKET=YOUR_AWS_S3_BUCKET

Database

We’ll use sqlite in this example instead of Laravel’s default which is MySQL. Set DB_CONNECTION to sqlite in your project’s .env file.

You’ll also need to create an empty sqlite database file: storage/database.sqlite .

Model

Now we need to create a Document model. Our Document model will have a name , file (a URL on S3 to our original file), preview_url (a URL to a preview generated by FilePreviews), and preview (a JSON string containing all the results and metadata generated by FilePreviews.

First we’ll generate our model and it’s pertaining migration file.

$ php artisan make:model Document --migration

We need to add the rest of our fields to that migration before running it. You’ll find the migration inside the database/migrations directory. It’ll be named something like 2015_11_25_125309_create_documents_table.php .

Make sure the up() function looks like the following.

public function up() { Schema::create('documents', function (Blueprint $table) { $table->increments('id'); $table->string('name'); $table->string('file'); $table->string('preview_url')->nullable(); $table->json('preview')->nullable(); $table->timestamps(); }); }

Now run your migrations.

$ php artisan migrate

Controllers

Our simple application will allow you to list existing documents and create new ones. To simplify things a bit we’ll generate a resource controller.

$ php artisan make:controller DocumentController

Let’s go ahead and add that to our routes.

Route::resource('documents', 'DocumentController');

Next we’ll configure our controller’s functions, index which will render our list of documents, and create which will render our form.

<?php namespace AppHttpControllers; use IlluminateHttpRequest; use AppDocument; use AppHttpRequests; use AppHttpControllersController; class DocumentController extends Controller { /** * Display a listing of the resource. * * @return IlluminateHttpResponse */ public function index() { $documents = Document::all(); return view('documents.index', compact('documents')); } /** * Show the form for creating a new resource. * * @return IlluminateHttpResponse */ public function create() { return view('documents.create'); } }

Note: Make sure to import/alias our Document model by adding use AppDocument; . Things like this always got me.

Views

Now our controller is missing the templates/views for both index and create .

Create resources/views/documents/index.blade.php . All this view does is list created documents, showing the id , name , and preview_url if available. We’ll also add a link to our create route.

<html> <head></head> <body> <h1>Documents</h1> <p><a href="{{ route('documents.create') }}">Create Document</a></p> @foreach ($documents as $document) <ul id="document-{{ $document->id }}"> <li>ID: {{ $document->id }}</li> <li>Name: <a href="{{ $document->url }}">{{ $document->name }}</a></li> <li class="preview-url"> @if ($document->preview_url) <a href="{{ $document->preview_url }}">Preview</a> @else No Preview @endif </li> </ul> @endforeach </body> </html>

Create resources/views/documents/create.blade.php . All this view does is show any errors with the form, and allow submitting a form with a file input field.

<html> <head></head> <body> <h1>Create Document</h1> @if (count($errors) > 0) <div> <ul> @foreach ($errors->all() as $error) <li>{{ $error }}</li> @endforeach </ul> </div> @endif <form action="/documents" method="POST" enctype="multipart/form-data"> {{ csrf_field() }} <p> <label for="file">File</label> <input type="file" name="file"> </p> <input type="submit"> </form> </body> </html>

Note: Make sure the form has the correct enctype or else you’ll have issues uploading files.

Uploading to S3 and storing Document

Now the fun starts! Let’s add the store function to our DocumentController .

<?php namespace AppHttpControllers; use Storage; use IlluminateHttpRequest; use AppDocument; use AppHttpRequests; use AppHttpControllersController; class DocumentController extends Controller { /** * Display a listing of the resource. * * @return IlluminateHttpResponse */ public function index() { $documents = Document::all(); return view('documents.index', compact('documents')); } /** * Show the form for creating a new resource. * * @return IlluminateHttpResponse */ public function create() { return view('documents.create'); } /** * Store a newly created resource in storage. * * @param IlluminateHttpRequest $request * @return IlluminateHttpResponse */ public function store(Request $request) { $this->validate($request, [ 'file' => 'required' ]); $file = $request->file('file'); if ($file->isValid()) { $name = $file->getClientOriginalName(); $key = 'documents/' . $name; Storage::disk('s3')->put($key, file_get_contents($file)); $document = new Document; $document->name = $name; $document->file = $key; $document->save(); } return redirect('documents'); } }

Note: Make sure to import/alias our Document model by adding use Storage; .

A couple of things going on here, let’s break it down.

Validate our file field is present. Make sure file is valid. Store file in S3. This file stored on S3 are private by default, meaning that we’ll need to generate a temporary URL to access them. Create Document using file name and key where file was stored in S3. Redirect to /documents .

Since our files are stored privately on S3 we’ll need a way to generate that temporary secure URL to access them. A good place to add this is in our model. We’ll append a dynamic property to our model called url . By using the underlying AWS client library, we can create a presigned URL that expires in 20 minutes. We access this property like any other, e.g. $document->url .

<?php namespace App; use Storage; use Config; use IlluminateDatabaseEloquentModel; class Document extends Model { protected $appends = ['url']; public function getUrlAttribute() { return $this->getFileUrl($this->attributes['file']); } private function getFileUrl($key) { $s3 = Storage::disk('s3'); $client = $s3->getDriver()->getAdapter()->getClient(); $bucket = Config::get('filesystems.disks.s3.bucket'); $command = $client->getCommand('GetObject', [ 'Bucket' => $bucket, 'Key' => $key ]); $request = $client->createPresignedRequest($command, '+20 minutes'); return (string) $request->getUri(); } }

If you run php artisan serve and navigate to http://localhost:8000/documents/create , pick a file, and submit, you should be redirected to http://localhost:8000/documents . You’ll now see the created Document. If you click on the file’s name you should be redirected to your file on S3 using our presigned URL. Success!

So we still haven’t actually done anything with FilePreviews at this point. This example until nows serves as an idea of what most people would be actually doing already. Now we’ll see how FilePreviews fits into all this.

Integrating with FilePreviews.io

We’ve put together a package that’ll help you implement FilePreviews in your Laravel projects. Let’s install that.

$ composer require filepreviews/filepreviews-laravel

Now we need to add our Service Provider and Facade to config/app.php .

'providers' => [ // ... FilePreviewsLaravelFilePreviewsServiceProvider::class, ], 'aliases' => [ // ... 'FilePreviews' => FilePreviewsLaravelFilePreviewsFacade::class, ]

To customize the configuration file, publish the package configuration by running php artisan vendor:publish .

Signup for a FilePreviews.io account by going to https://api.filepreviews.io/auth/signup/. Create a free application and get your Server API Key and Server API Secret from you application’s settings. Add those to your project’s .env .

FILEPREVIEWS_API_KEY=YOUR_FILEPREVIEWS_SERVER_API_KEY FILEPREVIEWS_API_SECRET=YOUR_FILEPREVIEWS_SERVER_SECRET_KEY

Generating Preview

Now we need to request generating a preview after our file has been uploaded and our Document created. Let’s add a function to our model which will then call from our controller.

public function requestPreview() { $fp = app('FilePreviews'); $options = [ 'metadata' => ['checksum', 'ocr'], 'data' => [ 'document_id' => $this->attributes['id'] ] ]; $url = $this->getFileUrl($this->attributes['file']); return $fp->generate($url, $options); }

We’re asking FilePreviews to generate a request for a file, extract the file’s checksum and OCR. We’re also adding our document id . We’ll use this later so we can identify what preview/metadata belongs to what document.

Let’s tweak our controller’s store function.

public function store(Request $request) { $this->validate($request, [ 'file' => 'required' ]); $file = $request->file('file'); if ($file->isValid()) { $name = $file->getClientOriginalName(); $key = 'documents/' . $name; Storage::disk('s3')->put($key, file_get_contents($file)); $document = new Document; $document->name = $name; $document->file = $key; $document->save(); $document->requestPreview(); } return redirect('documents'); }

After creating our document, we are calling our $document->requestPreview() to let FilePreviews know what we want.

If you run php artisan serve and navigate to http://localhost:8000/documents/create , pick a file, and submit, you should be redirected to http://localhost:8000/documents . You’ll now see the created Document, but you’ll still see “No Preview”. Why is that?

If you recall our requestPreview() function we call $fp->generate($url, $options); . This lets FilePreviews know what we want extracted from our file, we get a confirmation, but no results just yet. This is a fire and forget operation, since it could possibly take a few minutes depending on the file size and requested metadata. We could poll FilePreviews for our results but that’s not really efficient. This is why FilePreviews allows you to subscribe to your application’s webhook by setting a Callback URL.

Webhooks

Let’s go ahead and setup our application to handle webhooks. With filepreviews-laravel this is really easy. Add the following route to app/Http/routes.php :

Since FilePreviews webhooks need to bypass Laravel’s CSRF verification, be sure to list the URI as an exception in your app/Http/MiddlewareVerifyCsrfToken.php middleware:

<?php namespace AppHttpMiddleware; use IlluminateFoundationHttpMiddlewareVerifyCsrfToken as BaseVerifier; class VerifyCsrfToken extends BaseVerifier { /** * The URIs that should be excluded from CSRF verification. * * @var array */ protected $except = [ 'filepreviews/webhook' ]; }

The FilePreviews webhook controller we registered fires two events: filepreviews.success and filepreviews.error . Let’s create a Listener( app/Listeners/FilePreviewsSuccess.php ) to handle the filepreviews.success event.

<?php namespace AppListeners; use Event; use AppDocument; class FilePreviewsSuccess { /** * Handle the event. * * @param array $results * @return void */ public function handle($results) { $document_id = $results['user_data']['document_id']; $document = Document::find($document_id); $document->preview_url = $results['preview']['url']; $document->preview = json_encode($results); $document->save(); } }

Let’s setup the event listener mappings for this application in app/Providers/EventServiceProvider.php .

protected $listen = [ 'filepreviews.success' => [ 'AppListenersFilePreviewsSuccess' ] ];

Our listener will react to the filepreviews.success event, look for a Document that matches document_id and update it.

To try this out locally I recommend using something like ngrok.

With php artisan serve running, on another tab/window run ngrok localhost:8000 . Setup ngrok’s forwarding URL as your Callback URL on your FilePreviews application’s settings. Once that’s done navigate to http://localhost:8000/documents/create , pick a file, and submit. In a few seconds you should see a request logged in ngrok with the status 200 OK . If you then navigate to http://localhost:8000/documents you should see a link “Preview” instead of “No Preview”. Click that and you’ll see an image of the file you previously uploaded. Super cool stuff, right?

Bonus: Realtime with Pusher

Just because I’m really liking Laravel, I’ll show you how to add some realtime goodness using Pusher to what we already have working. Once we’re done we won’t need to refresh to see whenever our documents get previews.

Let’s add support for broadcasting events to Pusher.

$ composer require pusher/pusher-php-server

Go signup for a free account on Pusher, create an app, and set credentials in your project’s .env .

PUSHER_KEY=YOUR_PUSHER_APP_KEY PUSHER_SECRET=YOUR_PUSHER_APP_SECRET PUSHER_APP_ID=YOUR_PUSHER_APP_ID

Let’s create an event app/Events/FilePreviewsGenerated.php . This event will broadcast on the filepreviews channel an event called filepreviews.generated

<?php namespace AppEvents; use IlluminateQueueSerializesModels; use IlluminateContractsBroadcastingShouldBroadcast; use AppEventsEvent; use AppDocument; class FilePreviewsGenerated extends Event implements ShouldBroadcast { use SerializesModels; public $document; /** * Create a new event instance. * * @return void */ public function __construct(Document $document) { $this->document = $document; } /** * Get the channels the event should be broadcast on. * * @return array */ public function broadcastOn() { return ['filepreviews']; } /** * Get the broadcast event name. * * @return string */ public function broadcastAs() { return 'filepreviews.generated'; } }

We’ll tweak our FilePreviewsSuccess.php listener to fire a FilePreviewsGenerated event after saving our document.

<?php namespace AppListeners; use Event; use AppDocument; use AppEventsFilePreviewsGenerated; class FilePreviewsSuccess { /** * Handle the event. * * @param array $results * @return void */ public function handle($results) { $document_id = $results['user_data']['document_id']; $document = Document::find($document_id); $document->preview_url = $results['preview']['url']; $document->preview = json_encode($results); $document->save(); Event::fire(new FilePreviewsGenerated($document)); } }

All that’s left is add the Pusher JavaScript code on our index view.

<html> <head></head> <body> <h1>Documents</h1> <p><a href="{{ route('documents.create') }}">Create Document</a></p> @foreach ($documents as $document) <ul id="document-{{ $document->id }}"> <li>ID: {{ $document->id }}</li> <li>Name: <a href="{{ $document->url }}">{{ $document->name }}</a></li> <li class="preview-url"> @if ($document->preview_url) <a href="{{ $document->preview_url }}">Preview</a> @else No Preview @endif </li> </ul> @endforeach <script src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.11.3.min.js"></script> <script src="https://js.pusher.com/3.0/pusher.min.js"></script> <script> $(function() { // Enable pusher logging - don't include this in production Pusher.log = function(message) { if (window.console && window.console.log) { window.console.log(message); } }; var pusherKey = '{{ config('broadcasting.connections.pusher.key') }}', pusher = new Pusher(pusherKey, { encrypted: true }), channel = pusher.subscribe('filepreviews'); channel.bind('filepreviews.generated', function(data) { var $doc = $('#document-' + data.document.id), $previewUrl = $doc.find('.preview-url'); $previewUrl.html('<a href="' + data.document.preview_url + '">Preview</a>'); }); }); </script> </body> </html>

With php artisan serve and ngrok running, we’ll need a new tab/window to run php artisan queue:listen .

The complete source code for this example project is available on GitHub.

If you have any questions or feedback on this post or FilePreviews.io, feel free to let me know.