Run Laravel Artisan commands from within Visual Studio Code.
Note: The php
setting is optional if the setting artisan.php.location
is set in your settings.json
file and points to a valid php executable. If this setting is set, the extension will prefer the setting over the one within the path.
php
that can be ran on the command line such as php-cli
(This should be in your path)
php -v
artisan
in the workspace root
php artisan -v
Once you have installed the extension, it will become active once you open a workspace that has at least one artisan
file within the workspace.
You can then open the command pallet, and start running the commands.
Just type Artisan:
to get a list of commands. If you have more than one artisan
file within the workspace, then this will ask which artisan
file you want to use to execute the selected command.
Many commands have optional input questions, leave them blank to use the defaults, or enter your own value.
All commands are accessible through Artisan: Run Command
, here you can access your custom commands as well as built in commands.
You can also right click on some files and folders to run commands, the context menu will only show commands that are relevant to the file or folder you have right clicked on. The context menu will show on child folders and files as well as the main folder.
If you are running Laravel with Docker you can set config vars like this, considering your docker-compose.yml
is placed on project's root.
{
"artisan.docker.enabled": true,
"artisan.docker.command": "docker-compose exec <app>"
}
Where <app>
is your container name. Note this is a base command that will prepend to artisan commands.
Example:
docker-compose exec app php artisan make:model Post
Before running any commands, make sure the containers are running (docker-compose up
).
If php is installed with WSL (Windows Subsystems for Linux), add the path to the executable in settings.json
like below
When using the newer versions of WSL, you can set the artisan.wsl
setting to true
and the artisan.php.location
setting to /usr/bin/php
to use the default php installation.
{
// Opens wsl and runs the command in the wsl shell
"artisan.wsl.enabled": true,
// Optional if you have php installed in a different location that the one in the path:
"artisan.php.location": "/path/to/php"
}
<username>
with the correct user nameCanonicalGroupLimited.Ubuntu18.04onWindows_79rhkp1fndgsc
with the proper package nameusr\\bin\\php
if php is installed in different location{
"artisan.php.location": "C:\\Users\\<username>\\AppData\\Local\\Packages\\CanonicalGroupLimited.Ubuntu18.04onWindows_79rhkp1fndgsc\\LocalState\\rootfs\\usr\\bin\\php"
}