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Laravel Pay Pocket

Laravel Pay Pocket

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Laravel Pay Pocket is a package designed for Laravel applications, offering the flexibility to manage multiple wallet types within two dedicated database tables, wallets and wallets_logs.

Demo: Link to the demo in Laravel 12

Videos:

Note: This package does not handle payments from payment platforms, but instead offers the concept of virtual money, deposit, and withdrawal.

📚 Table of Contents


  • Author: Hamed Panjeh
  • Vendor: hpwebdeveloper
  • Package: laravel-pay-pocket
  • Version: 2.x
  • Composer: composer require hpwebdeveloper/laravel-pay-pocket

Version Compatibility

Package Version Laravel Versions PHP Versions Status
1.x 10.x 8.1+ Security fixes only
2.x 10.x, 11.x, 12.x 8.1+ Active support

Note: The package follows Laravel's philosophy of being as permissive as possible with PHP versions. Your application's composer.json will enforce the minimum PHP version required by your Laravel version (10.x requires PHP 8.1+, 11.x and 12.x require PHP 8.2+).

Installation

  • Step 1: You can install the package via composer:
composer require hpwebdeveloper/laravel-pay-pocket
  • Step 2: Publish and run the migrations with:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag="pay-pocket-migrations"
php artisan migrate

You have successfully added two dedicated database tables, wallets and wallets_logs, without making any modifications to the users table.

  • Step 3: Publish the wallet types using:
php artisan vendor:publish --tag="pay-pocket-wallets"
php artisan vendor:publish --tag="config"

This command will automatically publish the pay-pocket.php config file and also WalletEnums.php file into your application's config and app/Enums directories respectively.

Updating

If updating to version ^2.0.0, new migration and config files have been added to support the new Transaction Notes Feature

Run the following commands to publish the updated migrations and config:

php artisan vendor:publish --tag="pay-pocket-migrations"
php artisan migrate
php artisan vendor:publish --tag="pay-pocket-wallets"
php artisan vendor:publish --tag="config"

Preparation

Prepare User Model

To use this package you need to implement the WalletOperations into User model and utilize the ManagesWallet trait.

use HPWebdeveloper\LaravelPayPocket\Interfaces\WalletOperations;
use HPWebdeveloper\LaravelPayPocket\Traits\ManagesWallet;

class User extends Authenticatable implements WalletOperations
{
    use ManagesWallet;
}

Prepare Wallets

In Laravel Pay Pocket, you have the flexibility to define the order in which wallets are prioritized for payments through the use of Enums. The order of wallets in the Enum file determines their priority level. The first wallet listed has the highest priority and will be used first for deducting order values.

For example, consider the following wallet types defined in the Enum class (published in step 3 of installation):

namespace App\Enums;

enum WalletEnums: string
{
    case WALLET1 = 'wallet_1';
    case WALLET2 = 'wallet_2';
}

You have complete freedom to name your wallets as per your requirements and even add more wallet types to the Enum list.

In this particular setup, wallet_1 (WALLET1) is given the highest priority. When an order payment is processed, the system will first attempt to use wallet_1 to cover the cost. If wallet_1 does not have sufficient funds, wallet_2 (WALLET2) will be used next.

Example:

If the balance in wallet_1 is 10 and the balance in wallet_2 is 20, and you need to pay an order value of 15, the payment process will first utilize the entire balance of wallet_1. Since wallet_1's balance is insufficient to cover the full amount, the remaining 5 will be deducted from wallet_2. After the payment, wallet_2 will have a remaining balance of 15."

Usage, APIs and Operations:

Deposit

deposit(type: 'wallet_1', amount: 123.45, notes: null)

Deposit funds into wallet_1

$user = auth()->user();
$user->deposit('wallet_1', 123.45);

Deposit funds into wallet_2

$user = auth()->user();
$user->deposit('wallet_2', 67.89);

Or using provided facade

use HPWebdeveloper\LaravelPayPocket\Facades\LaravelPayPocket;

$user = auth()->user();
LaravelPayPocket::deposit($user, 'wallet_1', 123.45);

Note: wallet_1 and wallet_2 must already be defined in the WalletEnums.

Transaction Notes (#8)

When you need to add descriptions for a specific transaction, the $notes parameter enables you to provide details explaining the reason behind the transaction.

$user = auth()->user();
$user->deposit('wallet_1', 67.89, 'You ordered pizza.');

Pay

pay(amount: 12.34, notes: null)

Pay the value using the total combined balance available across all allowed wallets

$user = auth()->user();
$user->pay(12.34);

Or using provided facade

use HPWebdeveloper\LaravelPayPocket\Facades\LaravelPayPocket;

$user = auth()->user();
LaravelPayPocket::pay($user, 12.34);

Payment Transaction Logs

The pay() method returns a collection of WalletsLog instances representing all wallet transactions that occurred during the payment. This enables you to track exactly which wallets were used and access detailed transaction information.

Return Value:

@return \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Collection<WalletsLog>

Basic Usage:

$user = auth()->user();
$logs = $user->pay(120.00, 'Order #1234');

// Access transaction details
foreach ($logs as $log) {
    echo "Wallet: {$log->wallet_name}, Amount: {$log->value}";
}

Practical Examples:

// Get the number of wallets used in the payment
$walletCount = $logs->count();

// Calculate total amount deducted (verification)
$totalDeducted = $logs->sum('value');

// Get all wallet names used in the transaction
$walletsUsed = $logs->pluck('wallet_name');

// Access specific log details
$firstLog = $logs->first();
echo "From: {$firstLog->from}, To: {$firstLog->to}";
echo "Reference: {$firstLog->reference}";

Use Cases:

  • Receipt Generation: Display detailed payment breakdown showing amounts from each wallet
  • Audit Trail: Maintain comprehensive records of payment sources
  • Transaction Verification: Confirm the exact amount deducted from each wallet
  • Analytics: Track wallet usage patterns across payments

Example: Multi-Wallet Payment

$user = auth()->user();

// User has: wallet_1 = $100, wallet_2 = $50
$logs = $user->pay(120.00, 'Premium subscription');

// Returns collection with 2 logs:
// Log 1: wallet_1 deducted $100 (100.00 -> 0.00)
// Log 2: wallet_2 deducted $20 (50.00 -> 30.00)

echo "Payment completed using {$logs->count()} wallet(s)";
// Output: Payment completed using 2 wallet(s)

Note: This feature is backward compatible. Existing code that doesn't capture the return value will continue to work without any modifications.

Balance

  • Wallets
$user->walletBalance // Total combined balance available across all wallets

// Or using provided facade

LaravelPayPocket::checkBalance($user);
  • Particular Wallet
$user->getWalletBalanceByType('wallet_1') // Balance available in wallet_1
$user->getWalletBalanceByType('wallet_2') // Balance available in wallet_2

// Or using provided facade

LaravelPayPocket::walletBalanceByType($user, 'wallet_1');

Exceptions

Upon examining the src/Exceptions directory within the source code, you will discover a variety of exceptions tailored to address each scenario of invalid entry. Review the demo that accounts for some of the exceptions.

Log

A typical wallets_logs table. Laravel Pay Pocket Log

Testing

composer install

composer test

# Or

./vendor/bin/pest

Changelog

Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.

Contributing

Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.

Security Vulnerabilities

Please review our security policy on how to report security vulnerabilities.

Credits

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.

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A modern multi-wallet Laravel 10,11,12 package with comprehensive logging and payments capabilities - 16k installation

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