345 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
345 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
<!--
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tagline: Hosting and installing private Composer packages
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-->
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# Handling private packages
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# Private Packagist
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[Private Packagist](https://packagist.com) is a commercial package hosting product
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offering professional support and web based management of private and public packages,
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and granular access permissions. Private Packagist provides mirroring for packages' zip
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files which makes installs faster and independent from third party systems - e.g.
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you can deploy even if GitHub is down because your zip files are mirrored.
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Private Packagist is available as a hosted SaaS solution or as an on-premise self-hosted
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package, providing an easy interactive set up experience.
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Some of Private Packagist's revenue is used to pay for Composer and Packagist.org
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development and hosting so using it is a good way to support the maitenance of
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these open source projects financially. You can find more information about how to
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set up your own package archive on [Packagist.com](https://packagist.com).
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# Satis
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Satis on the other hand is open source but only a static `composer` repository
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generator. It is a bit like an ultra-lightweight, static file-based version of
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packagist and can be used to host the metadata of your company's private
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packages, or your own. You can get it from
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[GitHub](https://github.com/composer/satis) or install via CLI:
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php composer.phar create-project composer/satis --stability=dev --keep-vcs
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## Setup
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For example let's assume you have a few packages you want to reuse across your
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company but don't really want to open-source. You would first define a Satis
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configuration: a json file with an arbitrary name that lists your curated
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[repositories](../05-repositories.md).
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Here is an example configuration, you see that it holds a few VCS repositories,
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but those could be any types of [repositories](../05-repositories.md). Then it
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uses `"require-all": true` which selects all versions of all packages in the
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repositories you defined.
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The default file Satis looks for is `satis.json` in the root of the repository.
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```json
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{
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"name": "My Repository",
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"homepage": "http://packages.example.org",
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"repositories": [
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{ "type": "vcs", "url": "https://github.com/mycompany/privaterepo" },
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{ "type": "vcs", "url": "http://svn.example.org/private/repo" },
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{ "type": "vcs", "url": "https://github.com/mycompany/privaterepo2" }
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],
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"require-all": true
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}
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```
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If you want to cherry pick which packages you want, you can list all the
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packages you want to have in your satis repository inside the classic composer
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`require` key, using a `"*"` constraint to make sure all versions are selected,
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or another constraint if you want really specific versions.
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```json
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{
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"repositories": [
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{ "type": "vcs", "url": "https://github.com/mycompany/privaterepo" },
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{ "type": "vcs", "url": "http://svn.example.org/private/repo" },
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{ "type": "vcs", "url": "https://github.com/mycompany/privaterepo2" }
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],
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"require": {
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"company/package": "*",
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"company/package2": "*",
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"company/package3": "2.0.0"
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}
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}
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```
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Once you've done this, you just run:
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php bin/satis build <configuration file> <build dir>
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When you ironed out that process, what you would typically do is run this
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command as a cron job on a server. It would then update all your package info
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much like Packagist does.
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Note that if your private packages are hosted on GitHub, your server should
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have an ssh key that gives it access to those packages, and then you should add
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the `--no-interaction` (or `-n`) flag to the command to make sure it falls back
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to ssh key authentication instead of prompting for a password. This is also a
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good trick for continuous integration servers.
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Set up a virtual-host that points to that `web/` directory, let's say it is
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`packages.example.org`. Alternatively, with PHP >= 5.4.0, you can use the
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built-in CLI server `php -S localhost:port -t satis-output-dir/` for a
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temporary solution.
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### Partial Updates
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You can tell Satis to selectively update only particular packages or process
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only a repository with a given URL. This cuts down the time it takes to rebuild
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the `package.json` file and is helpful if you use (custom) webhooks to trigger
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rebuilds whenever code is pushed into one of your repositories.
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To rebuild only particular packages, pass the package names on the command line
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like so:
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php bin/satis build satis.json web/ this/package that/other-package
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Note that this will still need to pull and scan all of your VCS repositories
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because any VCS repository might contain (on any branch) one of the selected
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packages.
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If you want to scan only a single repository and update all packages found in
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it, pass the VCS repository URL as an optional argument:
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php bin/satis build --repository-url https://only.my/repo.git satis.json web/
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## Usage
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In your projects all you need to add now is your own composer repository using
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the `packages.example.org` as URL, then you can require your private packages
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and everything should work smoothly. You don't need to copy all your
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repositories in every project anymore. Only that one unique repository that
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will update itself.
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```json
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{
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"repositories": [ { "type": "composer", "url": "http://packages.example.org/" } ],
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"require": {
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"company/package": "1.2.0",
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"company/package2": "1.5.2",
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"company/package3": "dev-master"
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}
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}
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```
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### Security
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To secure your private repository you can host it over SSH or SSL using a client
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certificate. In your project you can use the `options` parameter to specify the
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connection options for the server.
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Example using a custom repository using SSH (requires the SSH2 PECL extension):
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```json
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{
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"repositories": [{
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"type": "composer",
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"url": "ssh2.sftp://example.org",
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"options": {
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"ssh2": {
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"username": "composer",
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"pubkey_file": "/home/composer/.ssh/id_rsa.pub",
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"privkey_file": "/home/composer/.ssh/id_rsa"
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}
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}
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}]
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}
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```
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> **Tip:** See [ssh2 context options] for more information.
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Example using HTTP over SSL using a client certificate:
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```json
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{
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"repositories": [{
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"type": "composer",
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"url": "https://example.org",
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"options": {
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"ssl": {
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"local_cert": "/home/composer/.ssl/composer.pem"
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}
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}
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}]
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}
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```
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> **Tip:** See [ssl context options] for more information.
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Example using a custom HTTP Header field for token authentication:
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```json
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{
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"repositories": [{
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"type": "composer",
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"url": "https://example.org",
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"options": {
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"http": {
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"header": [
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"API-TOKEN: YOUR-API-TOKEN"
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]
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}
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}
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}]
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}
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```
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### Authentication
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When your private repositories are password protected, you can store the
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authentication details permanently. The first time Composer needs to
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authenticate against some domain it will prompt you for a username/password and
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then you will be asked whether you want to store it.
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The storage can be done either globally in the `COMPOSER_HOME/auth.json` file
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(`COMPOSER_HOME` defaults to `~/.composer` or `%APPDATA%/Composer` on Windows)
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or also in the project directory directly sitting besides your composer.json.
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You can also configure these by hand using the config command if you need to
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configure a production machine to be able to run non-interactive installs. For
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example to enter credentials for example.org one could type:
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composer config http-basic.example.org username password
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That will store it in the current directory's auth.json, but if you want it
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available globally you can use the `--global` (`-g`) flag.
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### Downloads
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When GitHub or BitBucket repositories are mirrored on your local satis, the
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build process will include the location of the downloads these platforms make
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available. This means that the repository and your setup depend on the
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availability of these services.
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At the same time, this implies that all code which is hosted somewhere else (on
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another service or for example in Subversion) will not have downloads available
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and thus installations usually take a lot longer.
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To enable your satis installation to create downloads for all (Git, Mercurial
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and Subversion) your packages, add the following to your `satis.json`:
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``` json
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{
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"archive": {
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"directory": "dist",
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"format": "tar",
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"prefix-url": "https://amazing.cdn.example.org",
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"skip-dev": true
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}
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}
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```
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#### Options explained
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* `directory`: required, the location of the dist files (inside the
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`output-dir`)
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* `format`: optional, `zip` (default) or `tar`
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* `prefix-url`: optional, location of the downloads, homepage (from
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`satis.json`) followed by `directory` by default
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* `skip-dev`: optional, `false` by default, when enabled (`true`) satis will
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not create downloads for branches
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* `absolute-directory`: optional, a _local_ directory where the dist files are
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dumped instead of `output-dir`/`directory`
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* `whitelist`: optional, if set as a list of package names, satis will only
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dump the dist files of these packages
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* `blacklist`: optional, if set as a list of package names, satis will not
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dump the dist files of these packages
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* `checksum`: optional, `true` by default, when disabled (`false`) satis will
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not provide the sha1 checksum for the dist files
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Once enabled, all downloads (include those from GitHub and BitBucket) will be
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replaced with a _local_ version.
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#### prefix-url
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Prefixing the URL with another host is especially helpful if the downloads end
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up in a private Amazon S3 bucket or on a CDN host. A CDN would drastically
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improve download times and therefore package installation.
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Example: A `prefix-url` of `https://my-bucket.s3.amazonaws.com` (and
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`directory` set to `dist`) creates download URLs which look like the following:
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`https://my-bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/dist/vendor-package-version-ref.zip`.
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### Web outputs
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* `output-html`: optional, `true` by default, when disabled (`false`) satis
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will not generate the `output-dir`/index.html page.
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* `twig-template`: optional, a path to a personalized [Twig] template for
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the `output-dir`/index.html page.
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### Abandoned packages
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To enable your satis installation to indicate that some packages are abandoned,
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add the following to your `satis.json`:
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```json
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{
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"abandoned": {
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"company/package": true,
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"company/package2": "company/newpackage"
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}
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}
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```
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The `true` value indicates that the package is truly abandoned while the
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`"company/newpackage"` value specifies that the package is replaced by the
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`company/newpackage` package.
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Note that all packages set as abandoned in their own `composer.json` file will
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be marked abandoned as well.
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### Resolving dependencies
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It is possible to make satis automatically resolve and add all dependencies for
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your projects. This can be used with the Downloads functionality to have a
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complete local mirror of packages. Just add the following to your `satis.json`:
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```json
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{
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"require-dependencies": true,
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"require-dev-dependencies": true
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}
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```
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When searching for packages, satis will attempt to resolve all the required
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packages from the listed repositories. Therefore, if you are requiring a
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package from Packagist, you will need to define it in your `satis.json`.
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Dev dependencies are packaged only if the `require-dev-dependencies` parameter
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is set to true.
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### Other options
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* `providers`: optional, `false` by default, when enabled (`true`) each
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package will be dumped into a separate include file which will be only
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loaded by composer when the package is really required. Speeds up composer
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handling for repositories with huge number of packages like f.i. packagist.
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* `output-dir`: optional, defines where to output the repository files if not
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provided as an argument when calling the `build` command.
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* `config`: optional, lets you define all config options from composer, except
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`archive-format` and `archive-dir` as the configuration is done through
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[archive](#downloads) instead. See docs on [config schema] for more details.
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* `notify-batch`: optional, specify a URL that will be called every time a
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user installs a package. See [notify-batch].
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[ssh2 context options]: https://secure.php.net/manual/en/wrappers.ssh2.php#refsect1-wrappers.ssh2-options
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[ssl context options]: https://secure.php.net/manual/en/context.ssl.php
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[Twig]: http://twig.sensiolabs.org/
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[config schema]: https://getcomposer.org/doc/04-schema.md#config
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[notify-batch]: https://getcomposer.org/doc/05-repositories.md#notify-batch
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