timacdonald
Validation errors card for Laravel Pulse
A card for Laravel Pulse to show validation errors impacting users.
First, install the package via composer:
composer require timacdonald/pulse-validation-errors
Next, add the recorder to your config/pulse.php
:
return [
// ...
'recorders' => [
TiMacDonald\Pulse\Recorders\ValidationErrors::class => [
'enabled' => env('PULSE_VALIDATION_ERRORS_ENABLED', true),
'sample_rate' => env('PULSE_VALIDATION_ERRORS_SAMPLE_RATE', 1),
'capture_messages' => true,
'ignore' => [
// '#^/login$#',
// '#^/register$#',
// '#^/forgot-password$#',
],
'groups' => [
// '#^/products/.*$#' => '/products/{user}',
],
],
// ...
],
];
Next, add the card to your resources/views/vendor/pulse/dashboard.php
:
<x-pulse>
<livewire:pulse.validation-errors cols="8" rows="4" />
<!-- ... -->
</x-pulse>
Finally, get to improving your user experience. At LaraconUS I gave a talk on how much our validation sucks. If you are here, you likely also care about how your users experience validation errors on your app, so I'd love you to give it a watch.
You may ignore specific endpoints via the recorders ignore
key, however in some situations you may need more complex ignore rules. You can use Pulse's built in Pulse::filter
method to achieve this.
Here is an example where we are ignore a specific error message:
use Laravel\Pulse\Entry;
use Laravel\Pulse\Facades\Pulse;
use Laravel\Pulse\Value;
/**
* Bootstrap any application services.
*/
public function boot(): void
{
Pulse::filter(fn ($entry): bool => match ($entry->type) {
'validation_error' => ! Str::contains($entry->key, [
'The password is incorrect.',
'Your password has appeared in a data leak.',
// ...
]),
// ...
default => true,
});
}
If you are returning custom response formats, you may see __laravel_unknown
in the dashboard instead of the input names and error messages. This is because the package parses the response body to determine the validation errors. When the body is in an unrecognised format it is unable to parse the keys and messages from the response.
You should instead dispatch the ValidationExceptionOccurred
event to pass the validation messages to the card's recorder. You may do this wherever you are converting your exceptions into responses. This usually happens in the app/Exceptions/Handler
:
<?php
namespace App\Exceptions\Handler;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Event;
use Illuminate\Validation\ValidationException;
use Laravel\Pulse\Facades\Pulse;
use Throwable;
use TiMacDonald\Pulse\ValidationExceptionOccurred
class Handler
{
// ...
public function render($request, Throwable $e)
{
if ($e instanceof ValidationException) {
Pulse::rescue(fn () => Event::dispatch(new ValidationExceptionOccurred($request, $e)));
}
// custom exception rendering logic...
}
}