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Elian Van Cutsem
Elian Van Cutsem

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at elian.codes

Using Laravel Valet for local PHP development

This week I've been developing PHP and Twig at my internship at vBridge, since we're using a big pile of sourcecode, Docker doesn't perform as well. To fix this Bramus told me about a tool called Valet. So I went on the search to configure and install Valet.

Installing Valet

Installing Valet is actually really easy. They have incredible documentation (as usual with Laravel).

You can simply install it by using composer global require laravel/valet if you've installed Homebrew, PHP and Composer, else you should install those first (but also that is very easy). Once that's done, simply run valet install and Valet will install and start.

Now that valet is installed and started you'll be able to ping any .test domain and it'll answer from localhost or 172.0.0.1.

Valet also starts when you boot your computer and will run as a background process with only 7mb of RAM!

Also, Valet is MacOS only

Valet Link

So installing is easy, so mapping a domain shouldn't be hard right! just cd into the directory you want to run as a site and run valet link and the name of the directory will be used as domain. For insance:

cd laravelsite
valet link
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Now when you open your browser and go to laravelsite.test. It will magically appear on the screen! awesome right!

You can also name a link by running valet link <name>. For instance:

cd laravelsite
valet link newsite
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Now it's available at newsite.test

It's amazing!

Valet use

So, imagine that you're developing a website on your local machine with the newest version of PHP, but the server you'll be deploying to uses a much older PHP version. You don't want to put in the work to install a new old version right? Valet got you covered!

Just run valet use php@version and valet will use that version. If you don't have the version installed locally, it will install it for you.

But ofcourse, sphp is a valid choice too.

Valet Secure

Tired of the stupid browser notification that localhost isn't secured? Me too. Valet also has a nifty solution. Run valet secure <name>x and it will install a certificate for you.

It's insane how easy this all is!

valet-env.php

Ofcourse if you're a somewhat more demanding user. It can be interesting to use and create custom environment variables.

Valet has support for a file called valet-env.php and will use it to configure and use environment variables

For instance:

<?php

return [
    'newsite' => [
        'APP_ENV' => 'dev',
    ],
];
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Now when you'll open newsite.test in your browser, it'll have the dev environment!

Read the post about environment variable from Bramus here

Read the full documentation here!

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