2020-05-01 08:18:54 +00:00
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# Runtime Composer utilities
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While Composer is mostly used around your project to install its dependencies,
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there are a few things which are made available to you at runtime.
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If you need to rely on some of these in a specific version, you can require
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the `composer-runtime-api` package.
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## Autoload
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The autoloader is the most used one, and is already covered in our
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[basic usage guide](#01-basic-usage.md#autoloading). It is available in all
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Composer versions.
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## Installed versions
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composer-runtime-api 2.0 introduced a new `Composer\InstalledVersions` class which offers
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a few static methods to inspect which versions are currently installed. This is
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automatically available to your code as long as you include the Composer autoloader.
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The main use cases for this class are the following:
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### Knowing whether package X (or virtual package) is present
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```php
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\Composer\InstalledVersions::isInstalled('vendor/package'); // returns bool
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\Composer\InstalledVersions::isInstalled('psr/log-implementation'); // returns bool
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```
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Note that this can not be used to check whether platform packages are installed.
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### Knowing whether package X is installed in version Y
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> **Note:** To use this, your package must require `"composer/semver": "^2.0"`.
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```php
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use Composer\Semver\VersionParser;
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\Composer\InstalledVersions::satisfies(new VersionParser, 'vendor/package', '2.0.*');
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\Composer\InstalledVersions::satisfies(new VersionParser, 'psr/log-implementation', '^1.0');
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```
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This will return true if e.g. vendor/package is installed in a version matching
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`2.0.*`, but also if the given package name is replaced or provided by some other
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package.
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### Knowing the version of package X
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> **Note:** This will return `null` if the package name you ask for is not itself installed
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> but merely provided or replaced by another package. We therefore recommend using satisfies()
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> in library code at least. In application code you have a bit more control and it is less
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> important.
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```php
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// returns a normalized version (e.g. 1.2.3.0) if vendor/package is installed,
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// or null if it is provided/replaced,
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// or throws OutOfBoundsException if the package is not installed at all
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\Composer\InstalledVersions::getVersion('vendor/package');
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```
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```php
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// returns the original version (e.g. v1.2.3) if vendor/package is installed,
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// or null if it is provided/replaced,
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// or throws OutOfBoundsException if the package is not installed at all
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\Composer\InstalledVersions::getPrettyVersion('vendor/package');
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```
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```php
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// returns the package dist or source reference (e.g. a git commit hash) if vendor/package is installed,
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// or null if it is provided/replaced,
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// or throws OutOfBoundsException if the package is not installed at all
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\Composer\InstalledVersions::getReference('vendor/package');
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```
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2020-05-06 09:12:25 +00:00
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### Knowing a package's own installed version
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If you are only interested in getting a package's own version, e.g. in the source of acme/foo you want
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to know which version acme/foo is currently running to display that to the user, then it is
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acceptable to use getVersion/getPrettyVersion/getReference.
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The warning in the section above does not apply in this case as you are sure the package is present
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and not being replaced if your code is running.
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It is nonetheless a good idea to make sure you handle the `null` return value as gracefully as
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possible for safety.
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----
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2020-05-01 08:18:54 +00:00
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A few other methods are available for more complex usages, please refer to the
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source/docblocks of the class itself.
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## Platform check
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composer-runtime-api 2.0 introduced a new `vendor/composer/platform_check.php` file, which
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is included automatically when you include the Composer autoloader.
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It verifies that platform requirements (i.e. php and php extensions) are fulfilled
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by the PHP process currently running. If the requirements are not met, the script
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prints a warning with the missing requirements and exits with code 104.
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To avoid an unexpected white page of death with some obscure PHP extension warning in
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2020-05-01 12:50:55 +00:00
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production, you can run `composer check-platform-reqs --no-dev` as part of your
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deployment/build and if that returns a non-0 code you should abort.
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2020-05-01 08:18:54 +00:00
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If you for some reason do not want to use this safety check, and would rather
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risk runtime errors when your code executes, you can disable this by setting the
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[`platform-check`](06-config.md#platform-check) config option to `false`.
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← [Config](06-config.md) | [Community](08-community.md) →
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