{tip} We attempt to document every possible breaking change. Since some of these breaking changes are in obscure parts of the framework only a portion of these changes may actually affect your application. Want to save time? You can use Laravel Shift to help automate your application upgrades.
Likelihood Of Impact: High
Laravel now requires PHP 8.0.2 or greater.
You should update the following dependencies in your application's composer.json
file:
laravel/framework
to^9.0
nunomaduro/collision
to^6.1
In addition, please replace facade/ignition
with "spatie/laravel-ignition": "^1.0"
in your application's composer.json
file.
Furthermore, the following first-party packages have received new major releases to support Laravel 9.x. If applicable, you should read their individual upgrade guides before upgrading:
- Vonage Notification Channel (v3.0) (Replaces Nexmo)
Finally, examine any other third-party packages consumed by your application and verify you are using the proper version for Laravel 9 support.
PHP is beginning to transition to requiring return type definitions on PHP methods such as offsetGet
, offsetSet
, etc. In light of this, Laravel 9 has implemented these return types in its code base. Typically, this should not affect user written code; however, if you are overriding one of these methods by extending Laravel's core classes, you will need to add these return types to your own application or package code:
count(): int
getIterator(): Traversable
getSize(): int
jsonSerialize(): array
offsetExists($key): bool
offsetGet($key): mixed
offsetSet($key, $value): void
offsetUnset($key): void
In addition, return types were added to methods implementing PHP's SessionHandlerInterface
. Again, it is unlikely that this change affects your own application or package code:
open($savePath, $sessionName): bool
close(): bool
read($sessionId): string|false
write($sessionId, $data): bool
destroy($sessionId): bool
gc($lifetime): int
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The storagePath
method of the Illuminate\Contracts\Foundation\Application
interface has been updated to accept a $path
argument. If you are implementing this interface you should update your implementation accordingly:
public function storagePath($path = '');
Similarly, the langPath
method of the Illuminate\Foundation\Application
class has been updated to accept a $path
argument:
public function langPath($path = '');
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The exception handler's ignore
method is now public
instead of protected
. This method is not included in the default application skeleton; however, if you have manually defined this method you should update its visibility to public
:
public function ignore(string $class);
Likelihood Of Impact: Very Low
Previously, in order to override the default Laravel exception handler, custom implementations were bound into the service container using the \App\Exceptions\Handler::class
type. However, you should now bind custom implementations using the \Illuminate\Contracts\Debug\ExceptionHandler::class
type.
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
When iterating over a LazyCollection
instance within a Blade template, the $loop
variable is no longer available, as accessing this variable causes the entire LazyCollection
to be loaded into memory, thus rendering the usage of lazy collections pointless in this scenario.
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The new @checked
, @disabled
, and @selected
Blade directives may conflict with Vue events of the same name. You may use @@
to escape the directives and avoid this conflict: @@selected
.
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The Illuminate\Support\Enumerable
contract now defines a sole
method. If you are manually implementing this interface, you should update your implementation to reflect this new method:
public function sole($key = null, $operator = null, $value = null);
The reduceWithKeys
method has been removed as the reduce
method provides the same functionality. You may simply update your code to call reduce
instead of reduceWithKeys
.
The reduceMany
method has been renamed to reduceSpread
for naming consistency with other similar methods.
Likelihood Of Impact: Very Low
The Illuminate\Contracts\Container\Container
contract has received two method definitions: scoped
and scopedIf
. If you are manually implementing this contract, you should update your implementation to reflect these new methods.
Likelihood Of Impact: Very Low
The Illuminate\Contracts\Container\ContextualBindingBuilder
contract now defines a giveConfig
method. If you are manually implementing this interface, you should update your implementation to reflect this new method:
public function giveConfig($key, $default = null);
Likelihood Of Impact: Medium
The schema
configuration option used to configure Postgres connection search paths in your application's config/database.php
configuration file should be renamed to search_path
.
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The registerCustomDoctrineType
method has been removed from the Illuminate\Database\Schema\Builder
class. You may use the registerDoctrineType
method on the DB
facade instead, or register custom Doctrine types in the config/database.php
configuration file.
Likelihood Of Impact: Medium
In previous releases of Laravel, the set
method of custom cast classes was not invoked if the cast attribute was being set to null
. However, this behavior was inconsistent with the Laravel documentation. In Laravel 9.x, the set
method of the cast class will be invoked with null
as the provided $value
argument. Therefore, you should ensure your custom casts are able to sufficiently handle this scenario:
/**
* Prepare the given value for storage.
*
* @param \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model $model
* @param string $key
* @param AddressModel $value
* @param array $attributes
* @return array
*/
public function set($model, $key, $value, $attributes)
{
if (! $value instanceof AddressModel) {
throw new InvalidArgumentException('The given value is not an Address instance.');
}
return [
'address_line_one' => $value->lineOne,
'address_line_two' => $value->lineTwo,
];
}
Likelihood Of Impact: Medium
The belongsToMany
relationship's firstOrNew
, firstOrCreate
, and updateOrCreate
methods all accept an array of attributes as their first argument. In previous releases of Laravel, this array of attributes was compared against the "pivot" / intermediate table for existing records.
However, this behavior was unexpected and typically unwanted. Instead, these methods now compare the array of attributes against the table of the related model:
$user->roles()->updateOrCreate([
'name' => 'Administrator',
]);
In addition, the firstOrCreate
method now accepts a $values
array as its second argument. This array will be merged with the first argument to the method ($attributes
) when creating the related model if one does not already exist. This change makes this method consistent with the firstOrCreate
methods offered by other relationship types:
$user->roles()->firstOrCreate([
'name' => 'Administrator',
], [
'created_by' => $user->id,
]);
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The touch
method now accepts an attribute to touch. If you were previously overwriting this method, you should update your method signature to reflect this new argument:
public function touch($attribute = null);
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The Illuminate\Contracts\Encryption\Encrypter
contract now defines a getKey
method. If you are manually implementing this interface, you should update your implementation accordingly:
public function getKey();
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The getFacadeAccessor
method must always return a container binding key. In previous releases of Laravel, this method could return an object instance; however, this behavior is no longer supported. If you have written your own facades, you should ensure that this method returns a container binding string:
/**
* Get the registered name of the component.
*
* @return string
*/
protected static function getFacadeAccessor()
{
return Example::class;
}
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The FILESYSTEM_DRIVER
environment variable has been renamed to FILESYSTEM_DISK
to more accurately reflect its usage. This change only affects the application skeleton; however, you are welcome to update your own application's environment variables to reflect this change if you wish.
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The cloud
disk configuration option was removed from the default application skeleton in November of 2020. This change only affects the application skeleton. If you are using the cloud
disk within your application, you should leave this configuration value in your own application's skeleton.
Likelihood Of Impact: High
Laravel 9.x has migrated from Flysystem 1.x to 3.x. Under the hood, Flysystem powers all of the file manipulation methods provided by the Storage
facade. In light of this, some changes may be required within your application; however, we have tried to make this transition as seamless as possible.
Before using the S3, FTP, or SFTP drivers, you will need to install the appropriate package via the Composer package manager:
- Amazon S3:
composer require -W league/flysystem-aws-s3-v3 "^3.0"
- FTP:
composer require league/flysystem-ftp "^3.0"
- SFTP:
composer require league/flysystem-sftp-v3 "^3.0"
Write operations such as put
, write
, and writeStream
now overwrite existing files by default. If you do not want to overwrite existing files, you should manually check for the file's existence before performing the write operation.
Write operations such as put
, write
, and writeStream
no longer throw an exception when a write operation fails. Instead, false
is returned. If you would like to preserve the previous behavior which threw exceptions, you may define the throw
option within a filesystem disk's configuration array:
'public' => [
'driver' => 'local',
// ...
'throw' => true,
],
Attempting to read from a file that does not exist now returns null
. In previous releases of Laravel, an Illuminate\Contracts\Filesystem\FileNotFoundException
would have been thrown.
Attempting to delete
a file that does not exist now returns true
.
Flysystem no longer supports "cached adapters". Thus, they have been removed from Laravel and any relevant configuration (such as the cache
key within disk configurations) can be removed.
Slight changes have been made to the steps required to register custom filesystem drivers. Therefore, if you were defining your own custom filesystem drivers, or using packages that define custom drivers, you should update your code and dependencies.
For example, in Laravel 8.x, a custom filesystem driver might be registered like so:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
use League\Flysystem\Filesystem;
use Spatie\Dropbox\Client as DropboxClient;
use Spatie\FlysystemDropbox\DropboxAdapter;
Storage::extend('dropbox', function ($app, $config) {
$client = new DropboxClient(
$config['authorization_token']
);
return new Filesystem(new DropboxAdapter($client));
});
However, in Laravel 9.x, the callback given to the Storage::extend
method should return an instance of Illuminate\Filesystem\FilesystemAdapter
directly:
use Illuminate\Filesystem\FilesystemAdapter;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
use League\Flysystem\Filesystem;
use Spatie\Dropbox\Client as DropboxClient;
use Spatie\FlysystemDropbox\DropboxAdapter;
Storage::extend('dropbox', function ($app, $config) {
$adapter = new DropboxAdapter(
new DropboxClient($config['authorization_token'])
);
return new FilesystemAdapter(
new Filesystem($adapter, $config),
$adapter,
$config
);
});
Likelihood Of Impact: Very Low
Previously, the data_get
helper could be used to retrieve nested data on arrays and Collection
instances; however, this helper can now retrieve nested data on all iterable objects.
Likelihood Of Impact: Very Low
Laravel 9.x now includes a global str
helper function. If you are defining a global str
helper in your application, you should rename or remove it so that it does not conflict with Laravel's own str
helper.
Likelihood Of Impact: Medium
As you may know, when
and unless
methods are offered by various classes throughout the framework. These methods can be used to conditionally perform an action if the boolean value of the first argument to the method evaluates to true
or false
:
$collection->when(true, function ($collection) {
$collection->merge([1, 2, 3]);
});
Therefore, in previous releases of Laravel, passing a closure to the when
or unless
methods meant that the conditional operation would always execute, since a loose comparison against a closure object (or any other object) always evaluates to true
. This often led to unexpected outcomes because developers expect the result of the closure to be used as the boolean value that determines if the conditional action executes.
So, in Laravel 9.x, any closures passed to the when
or unless
methods will be executed and the value returned by the closure will be considered the boolean value used by the when
and unless
methods:
$collection->when(function ($collection) {
// This closure is executed...
return false;
}, function ($collection) {
// Not executed since first closure returned "false"...
$collection->merge([1, 2, 3]);
});
Likelihood Of Impact: Medium
The HTTP client now has a default timeout of 30 seconds. In other words, if the server does not respond within 30 seconds, an exception will be thrown. Previously, no default timeout length was configured on the HTTP client, causing requests to sometimes "hang" indefinitely.
If you wish to specify a longer timeout for a given request, you may do so using the timeout
method:
$response = Http::timeout(120)->get(/* ... */);
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
Previously, Laravel would not execute any provided Guzzle HTTP middleware when the HTTP client was "faked". However, in Laravel 9.x, Guzzle HTTP middleware will be executed even when the HTTP client is faked.
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
In previous releases of Laravel, invoking the Http::fake()
method would not affect instances of the Illuminate\Http\Client\Factory
that were injected into class constructors. However, in Laravel 9.x, Http::fake()
will ensure fake responses are returned by HTTP clients injected into other services via dependency injection. This behavior is more consistent with the behavior of other facades and fakes.
Likelihood Of Impact: High
One of the largest changes in Laravel 9.x is the transition from SwiftMailer, which is no longer maintained as of December 2021, to Symfony Mailer. However, we have tried to make this transition as seamless as possible for your applications. That being said, please thoroughly review the list of changes below to ensure your application is fully compatible.
To continue using the Mailgun transport, your application should require the symfony/mailgun-mailer
and symfony/http-client
Composer packages:
composer require symfony/mailgun-mailer symfony/http-client
The wildbit/swiftmailer-postmark
Composer package should be removed from your application. Instead, your application should require the symfony/postmark-mailer
and symfony/http-client
Composer packages:
composer require symfony/postmark-mailer symfony/http-client
The send
, html
, raw
, and plain
methods on Illuminate\Mail\Mailer
no longer return void
. Instead, an instance of Illuminate\Mail\SentMessage
is returned. This object contains an instance of Symfony\Component\Mailer\SentMessage
that is accessible via the getSymfonySentMessage
method or by dynamically invoking methods on the object.
Various SwiftMailer related methods, some of which were undocumented, have been renamed to their Symfony Mailer counterparts. For example, the withSwiftMessage
method has been renamed to withSymfonyMessage
:
// Laravel 8.x...
$this->withSwiftMessage(function ($message) {
$message->getHeaders()->addTextHeader(
'Custom-Header', 'Header Value'
);
});
// Laravel 9.x...
use Symfony\Component\Mime\Email;
$this->withSymfonyMessage(function (Email $message) {
$message->getHeaders()->addTextHeader(
'Custom-Header', 'Header Value'
);
});
{note} Please thoroughly review the Symfony Mailer documentation for all possible interactions with the
Symfony\Component\Mime\Email
object.
The list below contains a more thorough overview of renamed methods. Many of these methods are low-level methods used to interact with SwiftMailer / Symfony Mailer directly, so may not be commonly used within most Laravel applications:
Message::getSwiftMessage();
Message::getSymfonyMessage();
Mailable::withSwiftMessage($callback);
Mailable::withSymfonyMessage($callback);
MailMessage::withSwiftMessage($callback);
MailMessage::withSymfonyMessage($callback);
Mailer::getSwiftMailer();
Mailer::getSymfonyTransport();
Mailer::setSwiftMailer($swift);
Mailer::setSymfonyTransport(TransportInterface $transport);
MailManager::createTransport($config);
MailManager::createSymfonyTransport($config);
The Illuminate\Mail\Message
typically proxied missing methods to the underlying Swift_Message
instance. However, missing methods are now proxied to an instance of Symfony\Component\Mime\Email
instead. So, any code that was previously relying on missing methods to be proxied to SwiftMailer should be updated to their corresponding Symfony Mailer counterparts.
Again, many applications may not be interacting with these methods, as they are not documented within the Laravel documentation:
// Laravel 8.x...
$message
->setFrom('[email protected]')
->setTo('[email protected]')
->setSubject('Order Shipped')
->setBody('<h1>HTML</h1>', 'text/html')
->addPart('Plain Text', 'text/plain');
// Laravel 9.x...
$message
->from('[email protected]')
->to('[email protected]')
->subject('Order Shipped')
->html('<h1>HTML</h1>')
->text('Plain Text');
SwiftMailer offered the ability to define a custom domain to include in generated Message IDs via the mime.idgenerator.idright
configuration option. This is not supported by Symfony Mailer. Instead, Symfony Mailer will automatically generate a Message ID based on the sender.
The message
property of the Illuminate\Mail\Events\MessageSent
event now contains an instance of Symfony\Component\Mime\Email
instead of an instance of Swift_Message
. This message represents the email before it is sent.
Additionally, a new sent
property has been added to the MessageSent
event. This property contains an instance of Illuminate\Mail\SentMessage
and contains information about the sent email, such as the message ID.
It is no longer possible to force a transport reconnection (for example when the mailer is running via a daemon process). Instead, Symfony Mailer will attempt to reconnect to the transport automatically and throw an exception if the reconnection fails.
Defining stream options for the SMTP transport is no longer supported. Instead, you must define the relevant options directly within the configuration if they are supported. For example, to disable TLS peer verification:
'smtp' => [
// Laravel 8.x...
'stream' => [
'ssl' => [
'verify_peer' => false,
],
],
// Laravel 9.x...
'verify_peer' => false,
],
To learn more about the available configuration options, please review the Symfony Mailer documentation.
{note} In spite of the example above, you are not generally advised to disable SSL verification since it introduces the possibility of "man-in-the-middle" attacks.
Defining the SMTP auth_mode
in the mail
configuration file is no longer required. The authentication mode will be automatically negotiated between Symfony Mailer and the SMTP server.
It is no longer possible to retrieve a list of failed recipients after sending a message. Instead, a Symfony\Component\Mailer\Exception\TransportExceptionInterface
exception will be thrown if a message fails to send. Instead of relying on retrieving invalid email addresses after sending a message, we recommend that you validate email addresses before sending the message instead.
Likelihood Of Impact: Medium
In new Laravel applications, the resources/lang
directory is now located in the root project directory (lang
). If your package is publishing language files to this directory, you should ensure that your package is publishing to app()->langPath()
instead of a hard-coded path.
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
Laravel's dependency on opis/closure
has been replaced by laravel/serializable-closure
. This should not cause any breaking change in your application unless you are interacting with the opis/closure
library directly. In addition, the previously deprecated Illuminate\Queue\SerializableClosureFactory
and Illuminate\Queue\SerializableClosure
classes have been removed. If you are interacting with opis/closure
library directly or using any of the removed classes, you may use Laravel Serializable Closure instead.
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The flush
method defined by the Illuminate\Queue\Failed\FailedJobProviderInterface
interface now accepts an $hours
argument which determines how old a failed job must be (in hours) before it is flushed by the queue:flush
command. If you are manually implementing the FailedJobProviderInterface
you should ensure that your implementation is updated to reflect this new argument:
public function flush($hours = null);
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The Symfony\Component\HttpFoundaton\Request
class that is extended by Laravel's own Illuminate\Http\Request
class offers a getSession
method to get the current session storage handler. This method is not documented by Laravel as most Laravel applications interact with the session through Laravel's own session
method.
The getSession
method previously returned an instance of Illuminate\Session\Store
or null
; however, due to the Symfony 6.x release enforcing a return type of Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Session\SessionInterface
, the getSession
now correctly returns a SessionInterface
implementation or throws an \Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Exception\SessionNotFoundException
exception when no session is available.
Likelihood Of Impact: Medium
All calls to the assertDeleted
method should be updated to assertModelMissing
.
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
If you are upgrading your Laravel 8 project to Laravel 9 by importing your existing application code into a totally new Laravel 9 application skeleton, you may need to update your application's "trusted proxy" middleware.
Within your app/Http/Middleware/TrustProxies.php
file, update use Fideloper\Proxy\TrustProxies as Middleware
to use Illuminate\Http\Middleware\TrustProxies as Middleware
.
Next, within app/Http/Middleware/TrustProxies.php
, you should update the $headers
property definition:
// Before...
protected $headers = Request::HEADER_X_FORWARDED_ALL;
// After...
protected $headers =
Request::HEADER_X_FORWARDED_FOR |
Request::HEADER_X_FORWARDED_HOST |
Request::HEADER_X_FORWARDED_PORT |
Request::HEADER_X_FORWARDED_PROTO |
Request::HEADER_X_FORWARDED_AWS_ELB;
Finally, you can remove the fideloper/proxy
Composer dependency from your application:
composer remove fideloper/proxy
Likelihood Of Impact: Low
The validated
method offered by form requests now accepts $key
and $default
arguments. If you are manually overwriting the definition of this method, you should update your method's signature to reflect these new arguments:
public function validated($key = null, $default = null)
Likelihood Of Impact: Medium
The password
rule, which validates that the given input value matches the authenticated user's current password, has been renamed to current_password
.
Likelihood Of Impact: Medium
In previous releases of Laravel, you were required to manually instruct Laravel's validator to exclude unvalidated array keys from the "validated" data it returns, especially in combination with an array
rule that does not specify a list of allowed keys.
However, in Laravel 9.x, unvalidated array keys are always excluded from the "validated" data even when no allowed keys have been specified via the array
rule. Typically, this behavior is the most expected behavior and the previous excludeUnvalidatedArrayKeys
method was only added to Laravel 8.x as a temporary measure in order to preserve backwards compatibility.
Although it is not recommended, you may opt-in to the previous Laravel 8.x behavior by invoking a new includeUnvalidatedArrayKeys
method within the boot
method of one of your application's service providers:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Validator;
/**
* Register any application services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Validator::includeUnvalidatedArrayKeys();
}
We also encourage you to view the changes in the laravel/laravel
GitHub repository. While many of these changes are not required, you may wish to keep these files in sync with your application. Some of these changes will be covered in this upgrade guide, but others, such as changes to configuration files or comments, will not be. You can easily view the changes with the GitHub comparison tool and choose which updates are important to you.