tenancy-docs/docs/source/v2/tenant-aware-commands.blade.md
2019-11-10 16:03:22 +01:00

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---
title: Tenant-Aware Commands
description: Tenant-Aware Commands
extends: _layouts.documentation
section: content
---
# Tenant-Aware Commands {#tenant-aware-commands}
Even though [`tenants:run`]({{ $page->link('console-commands#run') }}) lets you run arbitrary artisan commands for tenants, you may want to have strictly tenant commands.
To make a command tenant-aware, utilize the `TenantAwareCommand` trait:
```php
class MyCommand extends Command
{
use TenantAwareCommand;
}
```
However, this trait requires you to implement a `getTenants()` method that returns an array of `Tenant` instances.
If you don't want to implement the options/arguments yourself, you may use one of these two traits:
- `HasATenantsOption` - accepts multiple tenant ids, optional -- by default the command is executed for all tenants
- `HasATenantArgument` - accepts a single tenant id, required argument
These traits implement the `getTenants()` method needed by `TenantAwareCommand`.
> Note: If you're using a custom constructor for your command, you need to add `$this->specifyParameters()` at the end for the option/argument traits to take effect.
So if you use these traits in combination with `TenantAwareCommand`, you won't have to change a thing in your command:
```php
class FooCommand extends Command
{
use TenantAwareCommand, HasATenantsOption;
public function handle()
{
//
}
}
class BarCommand extends Command
{
use TenantAwareCommand, HasATenantArgument;
public function handle()
{
//
}
}
```
### Custom implementation
If you want more control, you may implement this functionality yourself by simply accepting a `tenant_id` argument and then inside `handle()` doing something like this:
```php
tenancy()->find($this->argument('tenant_id'))->run(function () {
// your actual command code
});
```