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Laravel Dashboard Template

💫Basic Dashboard Template as a Package.💫

Note: Not suitable for single page applications as it's built in Blade, however you can use Vue/React/etc. components on all pages.

Installation

composer require sandulat/laravel-dashboard-template
php artisan laravel-dashboard-template:install

Note: to re-publish the front-end assets when updating the package use: php artisan laravel-dashboard-template:publish

The install command will publish the front-end assets and will create a new service provider App\Providers\DashboardServiceProvider. This is basically the main config of the template, but first let's see how to display the dashboard in the next section.

Layout

Create a route and a controller that will return a view. Inside the view place the following code:

my_view.blade.php:

@extends('laravel-dashboard-template::page')

@section('ldt-content')
    Some content
@endsection

Note: ldt stands for laravel-dashboard-template.

As you can see laravel-dashboard-template::page is just a layout. Besides ldt-content the layout provides more additional slots:

  • ldt-head - Head section for CSS, meta, etc.
  • ldt-scripts - Scripts section to include JS files.
  • ldt-topbar-left - Left section of topbar.
  • ldt-topbar-right - Right section of topbar, next to profile dropdown.
  • ldt-sidebar-footer - Footer section of sidebar.

To avoid duplication of these slots, it would be better to create your own layout that will extend the package's layout.

my_layout.blade.php:

@extends('laravel-dashboard-template::page')

@section('ldt-topbar-right')
    Language Select
@endsection

So now in your views you can do:

my_view.blade.php:

@extends('my_layout')

@section('ldt-content')
    Some content
@endsection

Card

Besides layout, the package provides a card component:

@component('laravel-dashboard-template::components.card')
    @slot('title')
        Dahboard
    @endslot

    Content
@endcomponent

The result can be seen in the screenshot at the top of the documentation.

Alerts

Out of the box the package will display 2 types of alerts above the content section of the layout. They will be displayed when you redirect with success and error flash data:

return back()->with('success', 'My success message.');
return back()->with('error', 'My error message.');

Configuration

You can configure the dashboard inside the installed provider: App\Providers\DashboardServiceProvider. By default it's empty because everything is already configured so you can start building instantly, however you can add the following methods to start customizing the dashboard:

/**
 * Topbar user name resolver.
 *
 * @return string
 */
public function userName(): string
{
    return Auth::check() ? Auth::user()->name : 'Guest';
}
/**
 * Topbar user avatar resolver.
 *
 * @return string
 */
public function userAvatar(): string
{
    if (Auth::check() && Auth::user()->avatar) {
        return Auth::user()->avatar;
    }

    return URL::asset('/vendor/laravel-dashboard-template/images/avatar.svg')
}
/**
 * Sidebar links.
 *
 * @return array
 */
public function sidebarLinks(): array
{
    return [
        'Menu' => [
            [
                'label' => 'Users',
                'url' => route('users'),
                'children' => [
                    [
                        'label' => 'Active Users',
                        'url' => route('users.active'),
                    ],
                ],
            ],
        ],
    ];
}
/**
 * Profile dropdown links.
 *
 * @return array
 */
public function profileDropdownLinks(): array
{
    return [
        [
            'label' => 'Edit Profile',
            'url' => route('profile'),
        ],
    ];
}
/**
 * Logout the user.
 *
 * @param \Illuminate\Http\Request $request
 * @return void
 */
public function logout(Request $request): void
{
    Auth::guard()->logout();

    $request->session()->invalidate();
}
/**
 * Action to be performed after logout.
 *
 * @return void
 */
public function loggedOut(): void
{
    //
}
/**
 * Redirect after logout.
 *
 * @return \Illuminate\Http\RedirectResponse
 */
public function logoutRedirect(): RedirectResponse
{
    return redirect('/');
}

Note: Each method from this service provider has dependency injection available.

Customization

I've tried to split the template into as many components & partials as possible. Just create inside your project the folder: resources/views/vendor/laravel-dashboard-template and now you can copy the files from the package and customize them. Here is the list:

  • partials/alert.blade.php
  • partials/alert_error.blade.php
  • partials/alert_success.blade.php
  • partials/sidebar.blade.php
  • partials/sidebar_link.blade.php
  • partials/sidebar_logo.blade.php
  • partials/topbar_profile_dropdown.blade.php

  • components/card.blade.php
  • components/dropdown.blade.php
  • components/dropdown_item.blade.php
  • components/topbar.blade.php

Using Vue/React/etc. components

The main div that wraps the dashboard has an app id. You can load your front-end framework onto this id and start using your components on all pages.

// Vue
new Vue({
    el: '#app',
});

//React
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('app'));

After you'll compile your front-end assets you can include them like this:

@section('ldt-head')
    <link href="{{ mix('/css/app.css') }}" rel="stylesheet">
@endsection
@section('ldt-scripts')
    <script src="{{ mix('/js/app.js') }}"></script>
@endsection

Note: If you don't have front-end assets versioning you might want to use the asset() method instead of mix().

Custom Logout Button

You can hide the default logout button by applying display: none; onto id #ldt-logout-button. The template already provides a logout system with customizable callbacks, so you can make use of it. Just submit the default "hidden" logout form with Javascript:

document.getElementById("ldt-logout-form").submit();

Credits

Created by Stratulat Alexandru.