3.7 KiB
Aliases
Why aliases?
When you are using a VCS repository, you will only get comparable versions for
branches that look like versions, such as 2.0
or 2.0.x
. For your master
branch, you
will get a dev-master
version. For your bugfix
branch, you will get a
dev-bugfix
version.
If your master
branch is used to tag releases of the 1.0
development line,
i.e. 1.0.1
, 1.0.2
, 1.0.3
, etc., any package depending on it will
probably require version 1.0.*
.
If anyone wants to require the latest dev-master
, they have a problem: Other
packages may require 1.0.*
, so requiring that dev version will lead to
conflicts, since dev-master
does not match the 1.0.*
constraint.
Enter aliases.
Branch alias
The dev-master
branch is one in your main VCS repo. It is rather common that
someone will want the latest master dev version. Thus, Composer allows you to
alias your dev-master
branch to a 1.0.x-dev
version. It is done by
specifying a branch-alias
field under extra
in composer.json
:
{
"extra": {
"branch-alias": {
"dev-master": "1.0.x-dev"
}
}
}
If you alias a non-comparable version (such as dev-develop) dev-
must prefix the
branch name. You may also alias a comparable version (i.e. start with numbers,
and end with .x-dev
), but only as a more specific version.
For example, 1.x-dev could be aliased as 1.2.x-dev.
The alias must be a comparable dev version, and the branch-alias
must be present on
the branch that it references. For dev-master
, you need to commit it on the
master
branch.
As a result, anyone can now require 1.0.*
and it will happily install
dev-master
.
In order to use branch aliasing, you must own the repository of the package being aliased. If you want to alias a third party package without maintaining a fork of it, use inline aliases as described below.
Require inline alias
Branch aliases are great for aliasing main development lines. But in order to use them you need to have control over the source repository, and you need to commit changes to version control.
This is not really fun when you want to try a bugfix of some library that is a dependency of your local project.
For this reason, you can alias packages in your require
and require-dev
fields. Let's say you found a bug in the monolog/monolog
package. You cloned
Monolog on GitHub and fixed the issue in
a branch named bugfix
. Now you want to install that version of monolog in your
local project.
You are using symfony/monolog-bundle
which requires monolog/monolog
version
1.*
. So you need your dev-bugfix
to match that constraint.
Add this to your project's root composer.json
:
{
"repositories": [
{
"type": "vcs",
"url": "https://github.com/you/monolog"
}
],
"require": {
"symfony/monolog-bundle": "2.0",
"monolog/monolog": "dev-bugfix as 1.0.x-dev"
}
}
That will fetch the dev-bugfix
version of monolog/monolog
from your GitHub
and alias it to 1.0.x-dev
.
Note: If a package with inline aliases is required, the alias (right of the
as
) is used as the version constraint. The part left of theas
is discarded. As a consequence, if A requires B and B requiresmonolog/monolog
versiondev-bugfix as 1.0.x-dev
, installing A will make B require1.0.x-dev
, which may exist as a branch alias or an actual1.0
branch. If it does not, it must be re-inline-aliased in A'scomposer.json
.
Note: Inline aliasing should be avoided, especially for published packages. If you found a bug, try and get your fix merged upstream. This helps to avoid issues for users of your package.