Laravel Envoy is a tool for executing common tasks you run on your remote servers. Using Blade style syntax, you can easily setup tasks for deployment, Artisan commands, and more. Currently, Envoy only supports the Mac and Linux operating systems. However, Windows support is achievable using WSL2.
First, install Envoy into your project using the Composer package manager:
composer require laravel/envoy --dev
Once Envoy has been installed, the Envoy binary will be available in your application's vendor/bin
directory:
php vendor/bin/envoy
Tasks are the basic building block of Envoy. Tasks define the shell commands that should execute on your remote servers when the task is invoked. For example, you might define a task that executes the php artisan queue:restart
command on all of your application's queue worker servers.
All of your Envoy tasks should be defined in an Envoy.blade.php
file at the root of your application. Here's an example to get you started:
@servers(['web' => ['[email protected]'], 'workers' => ['[email protected]']])
@task('restart-queues', ['on' => 'workers'])
cd /home/user/example.com
php artisan queue:restart
@endtask
As you can see, an array of @servers
is defined at the top of the file, allowing you to reference these servers via the on
option of your task declarations. The @servers
declaration should always be placed on a single line. Within your @task
declarations, you should place the shell commands that should execute on your servers when the task is invoked.
You can force a script to run on your local computer by specifying the server's IP address as 127.0.0.1
:
@servers(['localhost' => '127.0.0.1'])
Using the @import
directive, you may import other Envoy files so their stories and tasks are added to yours. After the files have been imported, you may execute the tasks they contain as if they were defined in your own Envoy file:
@import('vendor/package/Envoy.blade.php')
Envoy allows you to easily run a task across multiple servers. First, add additional servers to your @servers
declaration. Each server should be assigned a unique name. Once you have defined your additional servers you may list each of the servers in the task's on
array:
@servers(['web-1' => '192.168.1.1', 'web-2' => '192.168.1.2'])
@task('deploy', ['on' => ['web-1', 'web-2']])
cd /home/user/example.com
git pull origin {{ $branch }}
php artisan migrate --force
@endtask
By default, tasks will be executed on each server serially. In other words, a task will finish running on the first server before proceeding to execute on the second server. If you would like to run a task across multiple servers in parallel, add the parallel
option to your task declaration:
@servers(['web-1' => '192.168.1.1', 'web-2' => '192.168.1.2'])
@task('deploy', ['on' => ['web-1', 'web-2'], 'parallel' => true])
cd /home/user/example.com
git pull origin {{ $branch }}
php artisan migrate --force
@endtask
Sometimes, you may need to execute arbitrary PHP code before running your Envoy tasks. You may use the @setup
directive to define a block of PHP code that should execute before your tasks:
@setup
$now = new DateTime;
@endsetup
If you need to require other PHP files before your task is executed, you may use the @include
directive at the top of your Envoy.blade.php
file:
@include('vendor/autoload.php')
@task('restart-queues')
# ...
@endtask
If needed, you may pass arguments to Envoy tasks by specifying them on the command line when invoking Envoy:
php vendor/bin/envoy run deploy --branch=master
You may access the options within your tasks using Blade's "echo" syntax. You may also define Blade if
statements and loops within your tasks. For example, let's verify the presence of the $branch
variable before executing the git pull
command:
@servers(['web' => ['[email protected]']])
@task('deploy', ['on' => 'web'])
cd /home/user/example.com
@if ($branch)
git pull origin {{ $branch }}
@endif
php artisan migrate --force
@endtask
Stories group a set of tasks under a single, convenient name. For instance, a deploy
story may run the update-code
and install-dependencies
tasks by listing the task names within its definition:
@servers(['web' => ['[email protected]']])
@story('deploy')
update-code
install-dependencies
@endstory
@task('update-code')
cd /home/user/example.com
git pull origin master
@endtask
@task('install-dependencies')
cd /home/user/example.com
composer install
@endtask
Once the story has been written, you may invoke it in the same way you would invoke a task:
php vendor/bin/envoy run deploy
To run a task or story that is defined in your application's Envoy.blade.php
file, execute Envoy's run
command, passing the name of the task or story you would like to execute. Envoy will execute the task and display the output from your remote servers as the task is running:
php vendor/bin/envoy run deploy
If you would like to be prompted for confirmation before running a given task on your servers, you should add the confirm
directive to your task declaration. This option is particularly useful for destructive operations:
@task('deploy', ['on' => 'web', 'confirm' => true])
cd /home/user/example.com
git pull origin {{ $branch }}
php artisan migrate
@endtask
Envoy supports sending notifications to Slack after each task is executed. The @slack
directive accepts a Slack hook URL and a channel / user name. You may retrieve your webhook URL by creating an "Incoming WebHooks" integration in your Slack control panel.
You should pass the entire webhook URL as the first argument given to the @slack
directive. The second argument given to the @slack
directive should be a channel name (#channel
) or a user name (@user
):
@finished
@slack('webhook-url', '#bots')
@endfinished
Envoy also supports sending notifications to Discord after each task is executed. The @discord
directive accepts a Discord hook URL and a message. You may retrieve your webhook URL by creating a "Webhook" in your Server Settings and choosing which channel the webhook should post to. You should pass the entire Webhook URL into the @discord
directive:
@finished
@discord('discord-webhook-url')
@endfinished
Envoy also supports sending notifications to Telegram after each task is executed. The @telegram
directive accepts a Telegram Bot ID and a Chat ID. You may retrieve your Bot ID by creating a new bot using BotFather. You can retrieve a valid Chat ID using @username_to_id_bot. You should pass the entire Bot ID and Chat ID into the @telegram
directive:
@finished
@telegram('bot-id','chat-id')
@endfinished