=== foundation rules === # Laravel Boost Guidelines The Laravel Boost guidelines are specifically curated by Laravel maintainers for this application. These guidelines should be followed closely to enhance the user's satisfaction building Laravel applications. ## Foundational Context This application is a Laravel application and its main Laravel ecosystems package & versions are below. You are an expert with them all. Ensure you abide by these specific packages & versions. - php - 8.3.29 - laravel/framework (LARAVEL) - v12 - laravel/prompts (PROMPTS) - v0 - laravel/reverb (REVERB) - v1 - laravel/sail (SAIL) - v1 - livewire/livewire (LIVEWIRE) - v4 - laravel/mcp (MCP) - v0 - laravel/pint (PINT) - v1 - pestphp/pest (PEST) - v3 - phpunit/phpunit (PHPUNIT) - v11 - laravel-echo (ECHO) - v1 - tailwindcss (TAILWINDCSS) - v3 ## Conventions - You must follow all existing code conventions used in this application. When creating or editing a file, check sibling files for the correct structure, approach, and naming. - Use descriptive names for variables and methods. For example, `isRegisteredForDiscounts`, not `discount()`. - Check for existing components to reuse before writing a new one. ## Verification Scripts - Do not create verification scripts or tinker when tests cover that functionality and prove it works. Unit and feature tests are more important. ## Application Structure & Architecture - Stick to existing directory structure; don't create new base folders without approval. - Do not change the application's dependencies without approval. ## Frontend Bundling - If the user doesn't see a frontend change reflected in the UI, it could mean they need to run `vendor/bin/sail yarn run build`, `vendor/bin/sail yarn run dev`, or `vendor/bin/sail composer run dev`. Ask them. ## Replies - Be concise in your explanations - focus on what's important rather than explaining obvious details. ## Documentation Files - You must only create documentation files if explicitly requested by the user. === boost rules === ## Laravel Boost - Laravel Boost is an MCP server that comes with powerful tools designed specifically for this application. Use them. ## Artisan - Use the `list-artisan-commands` tool when you need to call an Artisan command to double-check the available parameters. ## URLs - Whenever you share a project URL with the user, you should use the `get-absolute-url` tool to ensure you're using the correct scheme, domain/IP, and port. ## Tinker / Debugging - You should use the `tinker` tool when you need to execute PHP to debug code or query Eloquent models directly. - Use the `database-query` tool when you only need to read from the database. ## Reading Browser Logs With the `browser-logs` Tool - You can read browser logs, errors, and exceptions using the `browser-logs` tool from Boost. - Only recent browser logs will be useful - ignore old logs. ## Searching Documentation (Critically Important) - Boost comes with a powerful `search-docs` tool you should use before any other approaches when dealing with Laravel or Laravel ecosystem packages. This tool automatically passes a list of installed packages and their versions to the remote Boost API, so it returns only version-specific documentation for the user's circumstance. You should pass an array of packages to filter on if you know you need docs for particular packages. - The `search-docs` tool is perfect for all Laravel-related packages, including Laravel, Inertia, Livewire, Filament, Tailwind, Pest, Nova, Nightwatch, etc. - You must use this tool to search for Laravel ecosystem documentation before falling back to other approaches. - Search the documentation before making code changes to ensure we are taking the correct approach. - Use multiple, broad, simple, topic-based queries to start. For example: `['rate limiting', 'routing rate limiting', 'routing']`. - Do not add package names to queries; package information is already shared. For example, use `test resource table`, not `filament 4 test resource table`. ### Available Search Syntax - You can and should pass multiple queries at once. The most relevant results will be returned first. 1. Simple Word Searches with auto-stemming - query=authentication - finds 'authenticate' and 'auth'. 2. Multiple Words (AND Logic) - query=rate limit - finds knowledge containing both "rate" AND "limit". 3. Quoted Phrases (Exact Position) - query="infinite scroll" - words must be adjacent and in that order. 4. Mixed Queries - query=middleware "rate limit" - "middleware" AND exact phrase "rate limit". 5. Multiple Queries - queries=["authentication", "middleware"] - ANY of these terms. === php rules === ## PHP - Always use curly braces for control structures, even if it has one line. ### Constructors - Use PHP 8 constructor property promotion in `__construct()`. - public function __construct(public GitHub $github) { } - Do not allow empty `__construct()` methods with zero parameters unless the constructor is private. ### Type Declarations - Always use explicit return type declarations for methods and functions. - Use appropriate PHP type hints for method parameters. protected function isAccessible(User $user, ?string $path = null): bool { ... } ## Comments - Prefer PHPDoc blocks over inline comments. Never use comments within the code itself unless there is something very complex going on. ## PHPDoc Blocks - Add useful array shape type definitions for arrays when appropriate. ## Enums - Typically, keys in an Enum should be TitleCase. For example: `FavoritePerson`, `BestLake`, `Monthly`. === sail rules === ## Laravel Sail - This project runs inside Laravel Sail's Docker containers. You MUST execute all commands through Sail. - Start services using `vendor/bin/sail up -d` and stop them with `vendor/bin/sail stop`. - Open the application in the browser by running `vendor/bin/sail open`. - Always prefix PHP, Artisan, Composer, and Node commands with `vendor/bin/sail`. Examples: - Run Artisan Commands: `vendor/bin/sail artisan migrate` - Install Composer packages: `vendor/bin/sail composer install` - Execute Node commands: `vendor/bin/sail yarn run dev` - Execute PHP scripts: `vendor/bin/sail php [script]` - View all available Sail commands by running `vendor/bin/sail` without arguments. === laravel/core rules === ## Do Things the Laravel Way - Use `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:` commands to create new files (i.e. migrations, controllers, models, etc.). You can list available Artisan commands using the `list-artisan-commands` tool. - If you're creating a generic PHP class, use `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:class`. - Pass `--no-interaction` to all Artisan commands to ensure they work without user input. You should also pass the correct `--options` to ensure correct behavior. ### Database - Always use proper Eloquent relationship methods with return type hints. Prefer relationship methods over raw queries or manual joins. - Use Eloquent models and relationships before suggesting raw database queries. - Avoid `DB::`; prefer `Model::query()`. Generate code that leverages Laravel's ORM capabilities rather than bypassing them. - Generate code that prevents N+1 query problems by using eager loading. - Use Laravel's query builder for very complex database operations. ### Model Creation - When creating new models, create useful factories and seeders for them too. Ask the user if they need any other things, using `list-artisan-commands` to check the available options to `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:model`. ### APIs & Eloquent Resources - For APIs, default to using Eloquent API Resources and API versioning unless existing API routes do not, then you should follow existing application convention. ### Controllers & Validation - Always create Form Request classes for validation rather than inline validation in controllers. Include both validation rules and custom error messages. - Check sibling Form Requests to see if the application uses array or string based validation rules. ### Queues - Use queued jobs for time-consuming operations with the `ShouldQueue` interface. ### Authentication & Authorization - Use Laravel's built-in authentication and authorization features (gates, policies, Sanctum, etc.). ### URL Generation - When generating links to other pages, prefer named routes and the `route()` function. ### Configuration - Use environment variables only in configuration files - never use the `env()` function directly outside of config files. Always use `config('app.name')`, not `env('APP_NAME')`. ### Testing - When creating models for tests, use the factories for the models. Check if the factory has custom states that can be used before manually setting up the model. - Faker: Use methods such as `$this->faker->word()` or `fake()->randomDigit()`. Follow existing conventions whether to use `$this->faker` or `fake()`. - When creating tests, make use of `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:test [options] {name}` to create a feature test, and pass `--unit` to create a unit test. Most tests should be feature tests. ### Vite Error - If you receive an "Illuminate\Foundation\ViteException: Unable to locate file in Vite manifest" error, you can run `vendor/bin/sail yarn run build` or ask the user to run `vendor/bin/sail yarn run dev` or `vendor/bin/sail composer run dev`. === laravel/v12 rules === ## Laravel 12 - Use the `search-docs` tool to get version-specific documentation. - Since Laravel 11, Laravel has a new streamlined file structure which this project uses. ### Laravel 12 Structure - In Laravel 12, middleware are no longer registered in `app/Http/Kernel.php`. - Middleware are configured declaratively in `bootstrap/app.php` using `Application::configure()->withMiddleware()`. - `bootstrap/app.php` is the file to register middleware, exceptions, and routing files. - `bootstrap/providers.php` contains application specific service providers. - The `app\Console\Kernel.php` file no longer exists; use `bootstrap/app.php` or `routes/console.php` for console configuration. - Console commands in `app/Console/Commands/` are automatically available and do not require manual registration. ### Database - When modifying a column, the migration must include all of the attributes that were previously defined on the column. Otherwise, they will be dropped and lost. - Laravel 12 allows limiting eagerly loaded records natively, without external packages: `$query->latest()->limit(10);`. ### Models - Casts can and likely should be set in a `casts()` method on a model rather than the `$casts` property. Follow existing conventions from other models. === livewire/core rules === ## Livewire - Use the `search-docs` tool to find exact version-specific documentation for how to write Livewire and Livewire tests. - Use the `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:livewire [Posts\CreatePost]` Artisan command to create new components. - State should live on the server, with the UI reflecting it. - All Livewire requests hit the Laravel backend; they're like regular HTTP requests. Always validate form data and run authorization checks in Livewire actions. ## Livewire Best Practices - Livewire components require a single root element. - Use `wire:loading` and `wire:dirty` for delightful loading states. - Add `wire:key` in loops: ```blade @foreach ($items as $item)
{{ $item->name }}
@endforeach ``` - Prefer lifecycle hooks like `mount()`, `updatedFoo()` for initialization and reactive side effects: public function mount(User $user) { $this->user = $user; } public function updatedSearch() { $this->resetPage(); } ## Testing Livewire Livewire::test(Counter::class) ->assertSet('count', 0) ->call('increment') ->assertSet('count', 1) ->assertSee(1) ->assertStatus(200); $this->get('/posts/create') ->assertSeeLivewire(CreatePost::class); === pint/core rules === ## Laravel Pint Code Formatter - You must run `vendor/bin/sail bin pint --dirty` before finalizing changes to ensure your code matches the project's expected style. - Do not run `vendor/bin/sail bin pint --test`, simply run `vendor/bin/sail bin pint` to fix any formatting issues. === pest/core rules === ## Pest ### Testing - If you need to verify a feature is working, write or update a Unit / Feature test. ### Pest Tests - All tests must be written using Pest. Use `vendor/bin/sail artisan make:test --pest {name}`. - You must not remove any tests or test files from the tests directory without approval. These are not temporary or helper files - these are core to the application. - Tests should test all of the happy paths, failure paths, and weird paths. - Tests live in the `tests/Feature` and `tests/Unit` directories. - Pest tests look and behave like this: it('is true', function () { expect(true)->toBeTrue(); }); ### Running Tests - Run the minimal number of tests using an appropriate filter before finalizing code edits. - To run all tests: `vendor/bin/sail artisan test --compact`. - To run all tests in a file: `vendor/bin/sail artisan test --compact tests/Feature/ExampleTest.php`. - To filter on a particular test name: `vendor/bin/sail artisan test --compact --filter=testName` (recommended after making a change to a related file). - When the tests relating to your changes are passing, ask the user if they would like to run the entire test suite to ensure everything is still passing. ### Pest Assertions - When asserting status codes on a response, use the specific method like `assertForbidden` and `assertNotFound` instead of using `assertStatus(403)` or similar, e.g.: it('returns all', function () { $response = $this->postJson('/api/docs', []); $response->assertSuccessful(); }); ### Mocking - Mocking can be very helpful when appropriate. - When mocking, you can use the `Pest\Laravel\mock` Pest function, but always import it via `use function Pest\Laravel\mock;` before using it. Alternatively, you can use `$this->mock()` if existing tests do. - You can also create partial mocks using the same import or self method. ### Datasets - Use datasets in Pest to simplify tests that have a lot of duplicated data. This is often the case when testing validation rules, so consider this solution when writing tests for validation rules. it('has emails', function (string $email) { expect($email)->not->toBeEmpty(); })->with([ 'james' => 'james@laravel.com', 'taylor' => 'taylor@laravel.com', ]); === tailwindcss/core rules === ## Tailwind CSS - Use Tailwind CSS classes to style HTML; check and use existing Tailwind conventions within the project before writing your own. - Offer to extract repeated patterns into components that match the project's conventions (i.e. Blade, JSX, Vue, etc.). - Think through class placement, order, priority, and defaults. Remove redundant classes, add classes to parent or child carefully to limit repetition, and group elements logically. - You can use the `search-docs` tool to get exact examples from the official documentation when needed. ### Spacing - When listing items, use gap utilities for spacing; don't use margins.
Superior
Michigan
Erie
### Dark Mode - If existing pages and components support dark mode, new pages and components must support dark mode in a similar way, typically using `dark:`. === tailwindcss/v3 rules === ## Tailwind CSS 3 - Always use Tailwind CSS v3; verify you're using only classes supported by this version.