6.0 KiB
Authentication for privately hosted packages
Your private package server is probably secured with one or more authentication options. In order to allow your project to have access to these packages you will have to tell Composer how to authenticate with the server that hosts the package(s).
Authentication principles
Whenever composer encounters a protected composer repository it will try to authenticate using already defined credentials first. When none of those credentials apply it will prompt for credentials instead otherwise overridden and save those (or a token if composer is able to retrieve one).
type | Generated by Prompt? |
---|---|
http-basic | yes |
Inline http-basic | no |
custom header | no |
gitlab-oauth | yes |
gitlab-token | yes |
Sometimes automatic authentication is not possible, or you may want to predefine authentication credentials.
Credentials can be stored on 3 different places; in an auth.json for the project, a global auth.json or in the composer.json itself.
Authentication in auth.json per project
In this authentication storage method, an 'auth.json' file will be present in the same folder as the projects' composer.json file. You can either create and edit this file using the command line or manually edit or create it.
Note: Make sure the auth.json file is in the .gitignore otherwise other people will be able to abuse your credentials.
Global authentication credentials
If you don't want to supply credentials for every project you work on, storing your credentials globally might be a better idea. These credentials are stored in a global auth.json in your composer home directory.
Command line global credential editing
For all authentication methods it is possible to edit them using the command line;
Manually editing global authentication credentials
Note: It is not recommended to manually edit your authentication options as this might result in invalid json. Instead preferably use the command line.
To manually edit it:
composer config --global --editor [--auth]
For specific authentication implementations, see their sections;
Manually editing this file instead of using the command line may result in invalid json errors. To fix this you need to open the file in an editor and fix the error. To find the location of your global auth.json, execute:
composer config --global --list
And look for the [home]
section. (It is by default ~/.composer
or %APPDATA%/Composer
on Windows)
The folder will contain your global auth.json if it exists.
You can open this file in your favorite editor and fix the error.
Authentication in composer.json file itself
Note: This is not recommended as these credentials are visible to anyone who has access to the composer.json, either when it is shared through a version control system like git or when an attacker gains (read) access to your production server files.
It is also possible to add credentials to a composer.json on a per-project basis in the 'config' section or directly to the repository definition.
Authentication methods
http-basic
Command line http-basic
composer config [--global] http-basic.example.org username password
Manual http-basic
composer config [--global] --editor --auth
{
"http-basic": {
"example.org": {
"username": "username",
"password": "password"
}
}
}
Inline http-basic
For the inline http-basic authentication method the credentials are not stored in a separate auth.json in the project or globally, but in the composer.json or global configuration in the same place where the composer repository definition is defined.
Command line inline http-basic
composer config [--global] repositories composer.unique-name https://username:password@repo.example.org
Manual inline http-basic
composer config [--global] --editor
{
"repositories": [
{
"type": "composer",
"url": "https://username:password@example.org"
}
]
}
Custom token authentication
Manual custom token authentication
composer config [--global] --editor
{
"repositories": [
{
"type": "composer",
"url": "https://example.org",
"options": {
"http": {
"header": [
"API-TOKEN: YOUR-API-TOKEN"
]
}
}
}
]
}
gitlab-oauth
Note: For the gitlab authentication to work on private gitlab instances, the "gitlab-domains" section should also contain the url.
Command line gitlab-oauth
composer config [--global] gitlab-oauth.example.org token
Manual gitlab-oauth
composer config [--global] --editor --auth
{
"gitlab-oauth": {
"example.org": "token"
}
}
gitlab-token
Note: For the gitlab authentication to work on private gitlab instances, the "gitlab-domains" section should also contain the url.
Command line gitlab-token
composer config [--global] gitlab-token.example.org token
Manual gitlab-token
composer config [--global] --editor --auth
{
"gitlab-token": {
"example.org": "token"
}
}