--TEST-- Test that install checks missing requirements from both composer.json if the lock file is outdated. --COMPOSER-- { "require": { "some/dep": "dev-main", "some/dep2": "dev-main" } } --LOCK-- { "content-hash": "old", "packages": [ {"name": "some/dep", "version": "dev-foo"} ], "packages-dev": [], "aliases": [], "minimum-stability": "stable", "stability-flags": [], "prefer-stable": false, "prefer-lowest": false, "platform": [], "platform-dev": [] } --RUN-- install --EXPECT-EXIT-CODE-- 4 --EXPECT-OUTPUT-- Installing dependencies from lock file (including require-dev) Verifying lock file contents can be installed on current platform. Warning: The lock file is not up to date with the latest changes in composer.json. You may be getting outdated dependencies. It is recommended that you run `composer update` or `composer update `. - Required package "some/dep" is in the lock file as "dev-foo" but that does not satisfy your constraint "dev-main". - Required package "some/dep2" is not present in the lock file. This usually happens when composer files are incorrectly merged or the composer.json file is manually edited. Read more about correctly resolving merge conflicts https://getcomposer.org/doc/articles/resolving-merge-conflicts.md and prefer using the "require" command over editing the composer.json file directly https://getcomposer.org/doc/03-cli.md#require-r --EXPECT--