Laravel Production Architecture Patterns is a development claude skill built by Affaan M. Best for: Backend developers structure production Laravel applications with clean architecture and maintainable code patterns..
- What it does
- Build scalable Laravel apps using architecture patterns for controllers, services, Eloquent ORM, and APIs.
- Category
- development
- Created by
- Affaan M
- Last updated
Laravel Production Architecture Patterns
Build scalable Laravel apps using architecture patterns for controllers, services, Eloquent ORM, and APIs.
Skill instructions
name: laravel-patterns description: Laravel architecture patterns, routing/controllers, Eloquent ORM, service layers, queues, events, caching, and API resources for production apps. origin: ECC
Laravel Development Patterns
Production-grade Laravel architecture patterns for scalable, maintainable applications.
When to Use
- Building Laravel web applications or APIs
- Structuring controllers, services, and domain logic
- Working with Eloquent models and relationships
- Designing APIs with resources and pagination
- Adding queues, events, caching, and background jobs
How It Works
- Structure the app around clear boundaries (controllers -> services/actions -> models).
- Use explicit bindings and scoped bindings to keep routing predictable; still enforce authorization for access control.
- Favor typed models, casts, and scopes to keep domain logic consistent.
- Keep IO-heavy work in queues and cache expensive reads.
- Centralize config in
config/*and keep environments explicit.
Examples
Project Structure
Use a conventional Laravel layout with clear layer boundaries (HTTP, services/actions, models).
Recommended Layout
app/
├── Actions/ # Single-purpose use cases
├── Console/
├── Events/
├── Exceptions/
├── Http/
│ ├── Controllers/
│ ├── Middleware/
│ ├── Requests/ # Form request validation
│ └── Resources/ # API resources
├── Jobs/
├── Models/
├── Policies/
├── Providers/
├── Services/ # Coordinating domain services
└── Support/
config/
database/
├── factories/
├── migrations/
└── seeders/
resources/
├── views/
└── lang/
routes/
├── api.php
├── web.php
└── console.php
Controllers -> Services -> Actions
Keep controllers thin. Put orchestration in services and single-purpose logic in actions.
final class CreateOrderAction
{
public function __construct(private OrderRepository $orders) {}
public function handle(CreateOrderData $data): Order
{
return $this->orders->create($data);
}
}
final class OrdersController extends Controller
{
public function __construct(private CreateOrderAction $createOrder) {}
public function store(StoreOrderRequest $request): JsonResponse
{
$order = $this->createOrder->handle($request->toDto());
return response()->json([
'success' => true,
'data' => OrderResource::make($order),
'error' => null,
'meta' => null,
], 201);
}
}
Routing and Controllers
Prefer route-model binding and resource controllers for clarity.
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;
Route::middleware('auth:sanctum')->group(function () {
Route::apiResource('projects', ProjectController::class);
});
Route Model Binding (Scoped)
Use scoped bindings to prevent cross-tenant access.
Route::scopeBindings()->group(function () {
Route::get('/accounts/{account}/projects/{project}', [ProjectController::class, 'show']);
});
Nested Routes and Binding Names
- Keep prefixes and paths consistent to avoid double nesting (e.g.,
conversationvsconversations). - Use a single parameter name that matches the bound model (e.g.,
{conversation}forConversation). - Prefer scoped bindings when nesting to enforce parent-child relationships.
use App\Http\Controllers\Api\ConversationController;
use App\Http\Controllers\Api\MessageController;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;
Route::middleware('auth:sanctum')->prefix('conversations')->group(function () {
Route::post('/', [ConversationController::class, 'store'])->name('conversations.store');
Route::scopeBindings()->group(function () {
Route::get('/{conversation}', [ConversationController::class, 'show'])
->name('conversations.show');
Route::post('/{conversation}/messages', [MessageController::class, 'store'])
->name('conversation-messages.store');
Route::get('/{conversation}/messages/{message}', [MessageController::class, 'show'])
->name('conversation-messages.show');
});
});
If you want a parameter to resolve to a different model class, define explicit binding. For custom binding logic, use Route::bind() or implement resolveRouteBinding() on the model.
use App\Models\AiConversation;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Route;
Route::model('conversation', AiConversation::class);
Service Container Bindings
Bind interfaces to implementations in a service provider for clear dependency wiring.
use App\Repositories\EloquentOrderRepository;
use App\Repositories\OrderRepository;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
final class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
public function register(): void
{
$this->app->bind(OrderRepository::class, EloquentOrderRepository::class);
}
}
Eloquent Model Patterns
Model Configuration
final class Project extends Model
{
use HasFactory;
protected $fillable = ['name', 'owner_id', 'status'];
protected $casts = [
'status' => ProjectStatus::class,
'archived_at' => 'datetime',
];
public function owner(): BelongsTo
{
return $this->belongsTo(User::class, 'owner_id');
}
public function scopeActive(Builder $query): Builder
{
return $query->whereNull('archived_at');
}
}
Custom Casts and Value Objects
Use enums or value objects for strict typing.
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Casts\Attribute;
protected $casts = [
'status' => ProjectStatus::class,
];
protected function budgetCents(): Attribute
{
return Attribute::make(
get: fn (int $value) => Money::fromCents($value),
set: fn (Money $money) => $money->toCents(),
);
}
Eager Loading to Avoid N+1
$orders = Order::query()
->with(['customer', 'items.product'])
->latest()
->paginate(25);
Query Objects for Complex Filters
final class ProjectQuery
{
public function __construct(private Builder $query) {}
public function ownedBy(int $userId): self
{
$query = clone $this->query;
return new self($query->where('owner_id', $userId));
}
public function active(): self
{
$query = clone $this->query;
return new self($query->whereNull('archived_at'));
}
public function builder(): Builder
{
return $this->query;
}
}
Global Scopes and Soft Deletes
Use global scopes for default filtering and SoftDeletes for recoverable records.
Use either a global scope or a named scope for the same filter, not both, unless you intend layered behavior.
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\SoftDeletes;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
final class Project extends Model
{
use SoftDeletes;
protected static function booted(): void
{
static::addGlobalScope('active', function (Builder $builder): void {
$builder->whereNull('archived_at');
});
}
}
Query Scopes for Reusable Filters
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Builder;
final class Project extends Model
{
public function scopeOwnedBy(Builder $query, int $userId): Builder
{
return $query->where('owner_id', $userId);
}
}
// In service, repository etc.
$projects = Project::ownedBy($user->id)->get();
Transactions for Multi-Step Updates
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
DB::transaction(function (): void {
$order->update(['status' => 'paid']);
$order->items()->update(['paid_at' => now()]);
});
Migrations
Naming Convention
- File names use timestamps:
YYYY_MM_DD_HHMMSS_create_users_table.php - Migrations use anonymous classes (no named class); the filename communicates intent
- Table names are
snake_caseand plural by default
Example Migration
use Illuminate\Database\Migrations\Migration;
use Illuminate\Database\Schema\Blueprint;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Schema;
return new class extends Migration
{
public function up(): void
{
Schema::create('orders', function (Blueprint $table): void {
$table->id();
$table->foreignId('customer_id')->constrained()->cascadeOnDelete();
$table->string('status', 32)->index();
$table->unsignedInteger('total_cents');
$table->timestamps();
});
}
public function down(): void
{
Schema::dropIfExists('orders');
}
};
Form Requests and Validation
Keep validation in form requests and transform inputs to DTOs.
use App\Models\Order;
final class StoreOrderRequest extends FormRequest
{
public function authorize(): bool
{
return $this->user()?->can('create', Order::class) ?? false;
}
public function rules(): array
{
return [
'customer_id' => ['required', 'integer', 'exists:customers,id'],
'items' => ['required', 'array', 'min:1'],
'items.*.sku' => ['required', 'string'],
'items.*.quantity' => ['required', 'integer', 'min:1'],
];
}
public function toDto(): CreateOrderData
{
return new CreateOrderData(
customerId: (int) $this->validated('customer_id'),
items: $this->validated('items'),
);
}
}
API Resources
Keep API responses consistent with resources and pagination.
$projects = Project::query()->active()->paginate(25);
return response()->json([
'success' => true,
'data' => ProjectResource::collection($projects->items()),
'error' => null,
'meta' => [
'page' => $projects->currentPage(),
'per_page' => $projects->perPage(),
'total' => $projects->total(),
],
]);
Events, Jobs, and Queues
- Emit domain events for side effects (emails, analytics)
- Use queued jobs for slow work (reports, exports, webhooks)
- Prefer idempotent handlers with retries and backoff
Caching
- Cache read-heavy endpoints and expensive queries
- Invalidate caches on model events (created/updated/deleted)
- Use tags when caching related data for easy invalidation
Configuration and Environments
- Keep secrets in
.envand config inconfig/*.php - Use per-environment config overrides and
config:cachein production
Use this skill
Most skills are portable instruction packages. Claude Code supports SKILL.md directly. Other agents can use adapted files like AGENTS.md, .cursorrules, and GEMINI.md.
Claude Code
Save SKILL.md into your Claude Skills folder, then restart Claude Code.
mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills/laravel-production-architecture-patterns-2 && curl -L "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/affaan-m/everything-claude-code/HEAD/skills/laravel-patterns/SKILL.md" -o ~/.claude/skills/laravel-production-architecture-patterns-2/SKILL.mdInstalls to ~/.claude/skills/laravel-production-architecture-patterns-2/SKILL.md.
Use cases
Backend developers structure production Laravel applications with clean architecture and maintainable code patterns.
Reviews
No reviews yet. Be the first to review this skill.
No signup required
Stats
Creator
AAffaan M
@affaan-m