--- category: tool tool: Composer contributors: - ["Brett Taylor", "https://github.com/glutnix"] filename: LearnComposer.sh --- [Composer](https://getcomposer.org/) is a tool for dependency management in PHP. It allows you to declare the libraries your project depends on and it will manage (install/update) them for you. # Installing ```sh # Installs the composer.phar binary into the current directory curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php # If you use this approach, you will need to invoke composer like this: php composer.phar about # Installs the binary into ~/bin/composer # Note: make sure ~/bin is in your shell's PATH environment variable curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php -- --install-dir=~/bin --filename=composer ``` Windows users should follow the [Windows installation instructions](https://getcomposer.org/doc/00-intro.md#installation-windows) ## Confirming installation ```sh # Check version and list options composer # Get more help for options composer help require # Check if Composer is able to do the things it needs, and if it's up to date composer diagnose composer diag # shorthand # Updates the Composer binary to the latest version composer self-update composer self # shorthand ``` # Usage Composer stores your project dependencies in `composer.json`. You can edit this file, but it is best to let Composer manage it for you. ```sh # Create a new project in the current folder composer init # runs an interactive questionnaire asking you for details about your project. Leaving them blank is fine unless you are making other projects dependent on this one. # If a composer.json file already exists, download the dependencies composer install # To download the just the production dependencies, i.e. excluding development dependencies composer install --no-dev # Add a production dependency to this project composer require guzzlehttp/guzzle # will figure out what the latest version of guzzlehttp/guzzle is, download it, and add the new dependency to composer.json's require field. composer require guzzlehttp/guzzle:6.0.* # will download the latest version matching the pattern (eg. 6.0.2) and add the dependency to composer.json's require field composer require --dev phpunit/phpunit:~4.5.0 # will require as a development dependency. Will use the latest version >=4.5.0 and < 4.6.0 composer require-dev phpunit/phpunit:^4.5.0 # will require as a development dependency. Will use the latest version >=4.5.0 and < 5.0 # For more information on Composer version matching, see [Composer's documentation on Versions](https://getcomposer.org/doc/articles/versions.md) for more details # To see what packages are available to install and currently installed composer show # To see what packages are currently installed composer show --installed # To find a package with 'mailgun' in its name or description composer search mailgun ``` [Packagist.org](https://packagist.org/) is the main repository for Composer packages. Search there for existing third-party packages. ## `composer.json` vs `composer.lock` The `composer.json` file stores your project's floating version preferences for each dependency, along with other information. The `composer.lock` file stores exactly which version it has downloaded for each dependency. Never edit this file. If you include the `composer.lock` file in your git repository, every developer will install the currently used version of the dependency. Even when a new version of a dependency is released, Composer will continue to download the version recorded in the lock file. ```sh # If you want to update all the dependencies to their newest version still matching your version preferences composer update # If you want the new version of a particular dependency: composer update phpunit/phpunit # If you wish to migrate a package to a newer version preference, you may need to remove the older package and its dependencies first. composer remove --dev phpunit/phpunit composer require --dev phpunit/phpunit:^5.0 ``` ## Autoloader Composer creates an autoloader class you can require from your application. You can make instances of classes via their namespace. ```php require __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php'; $mailgun = new Mailgun\Mailgun("key"); ``` ### PSR-4 Autoloader You can add your own namespaces to the autoloader. In `composer.json`, add a 'autoload' field: ```json { "autoload": { "psr-4": {"Acme\\": "src/"} } } ``` This will tell the autoloader to look for anything in the `\Acme\` namespace within the `src` folder. You can also [use PSR-0, a Classmap or just a list of files to include](https://getcomposer.org/doc/04-schema.md#autoload). There is also the `autoload-dev` field for development-only namespaces. When adding or modifying the autoload key, you will need to rebuild the autoloader: ```sh composer dump-autoload composer dump # shorthand # Optimizes PSR0 and PSR4 packages to be loaded with classmaps too. Slow to run, but improves performance on production. composer dump-autoload --optimize --no-dev ``` # Composer's Cache ```sh # Composer will retain downloaded packages to use in the future. Clear it with: composer clear-cache ``` # Troubleshooting ```sh composer diagnose composer self-update composer clear-cache ``` ## Topics not (yet) covered in this tutorial * Creating and distributing your own packages on Packagist.org or elsewhere * Pre- and post- script hooks: run tasks when certain composer events take place ### References * [Composer - Dependency Manager for PHP](https://getcomposer.org/) * [Packagist.org](https://packagist.org/)