7.4 KiB
Scripts
What is a script?
A script, in Composer's terms, can either be a PHP callback (defined as a static method) or any command-line executable command. Scripts are useful for executing a package's custom code or package-specific commands during the Composer execution process.
Note: Only scripts defined in the root package's
composer.json
are executed. If a dependency of the root package specifies its own scripts, Composer does not execute those additional scripts.
Event names
Composer fires the following named events during its execution process:
Command Events
- pre-install-cmd: occurs before the
install
command is executed. - post-install-cmd: occurs after the
install
command is executed. - pre-update-cmd: occurs before the
update
command is executed. - post-update-cmd: occurs after the
update
command is executed. - pre-status-cmd: occurs before the
status
command is executed. - post-status-cmd: occurs after the
status
command is executed. - pre-archive-cmd: occurs before the
archive
command is executed. - post-archive-cmd: occurs after the
archive
command is executed. - pre-autoload-dump: occurs before the autoloader is dumped, either
during
install
/update
, or via thedump-autoload
command. - post-autoload-dump: occurs after the autoloader is dumped, either
during
install
/update
, or via thedump-autoload
command. - post-root-package-install: occurs after the root package has been
installed, during the
create-project
command. - post-create-project-cmd: occurs after the
create-project
command is executed.
Installer Events
- pre-dependencies-solving: occurs before the dependencies are resolved.
- post-dependencies-solving: occurs after the dependencies are resolved.
Package Events
- pre-package-install: occurs before a package is installed.
- post-package-install: occurs after a package is installed.
- pre-package-update: occurs before a package is updated.
- post-package-update: occurs after a package is updated.
- pre-package-uninstall: occurs before a package has been uninstalled.
- post-package-uninstall: occurs after a package has been uninstalled.
Plugin Events
- command: occurs before any Composer Command is executed on the CLI. It provides you with access to the input and output objects of the program.
- pre-file-download: occurs before files are downloaded and allows
you to manipulate the
RemoteFilesystem
object prior to downloading files based on the URL to be downloaded.
Note: Composer makes no assumptions about the state of your dependencies prior to
install
orupdate
. Therefore, you should not specify scripts that require Composer-managed dependencies in thepre-update-cmd
orpre-install-cmd
event hooks. If you need to execute scripts prior toinstall
orupdate
please make sure they are self-contained within your root package.
Defining scripts
The root JSON object in composer.json
should have a property called
"scripts"
, which contains pairs of named events and each event's
corresponding scripts. An event's scripts can be defined as either as a string
(only for a single script) or an array (for single or multiple scripts.)
For any given event:
- Scripts execute in the order defined when their corresponding event is fired.
- An array of scripts wired to a single event can contain both PHP callbacks and command-line executable commands.
- PHP classes containing defined callbacks must be autoloadable via Composer's autoload functionality.
- If a defined callback relies on functions defined outside of a class, the callback itself is responsible for loading the appropriate files, as no files are autoloaded during Composer commands.
Script definition example:
{
"scripts": {
"post-update-cmd": "MyVendor\\MyClass::postUpdate",
"post-package-install": [
"MyVendor\\MyClass::postPackageInstall"
],
"post-install-cmd": [
"MyVendor\\MyClass::warmCache",
"phpunit -c app/"
],
"post-create-project-cmd" : [
"php -r \"copy('config/local-example.php', 'config/local.php');\""
]
}
}
Using the previous definition example, here's the class MyVendor\MyClass
that might be used to execute the PHP callbacks:
<?php
namespace MyVendor;
use Composer\Script\Event;
use Composer\Installer\PackageEvent;
class MyClass
{
public static function postUpdate(Event $event)
{
$composer = $event->getComposer();
// do stuff
}
public static function postAutoloadDump(Event $event)
{
$vendorDir = $event->getComposer()->getConfig()->get('vendor-dir');
require $vendorDir . '/autoload.php';
some_function_from_an_autoloaded_file();
}
public static function postPackageInstall(PackageEvent $event)
{
$installedPackage = $event->getOperation()->getPackage();
// do stuff
}
public static function warmCache(Event $event)
{
// make cache toasty
}
}
When an event is fired, your PHP callback receives as first argument an
Composer\EventDispatcher\Event
object. This object has a getName()
method
that lets you retrieve event name.
Depending on the script types (see list above) you will get various event subclasses containing various getters with relevant data and associated objects:
- Base class:
Composer\EventDispatcher\Event
- Command Events:
Composer\Script\Event
- Installer Events:
Composer\Installer\InstallerEvent
- Package Events:
Composer\Installer\PackageEvent
- Plugin Events:
- command:
Composer\Plugin\CommandEvent
- pre-file-download:
Composer\Plugin\PreFileDownloadEvent
- command:
Running scripts manually
If you would like to run the scripts for an event manually, the syntax is:
composer run-script [--dev] [--no-dev] script
For example composer run-script post-install-cmd
will run any
post-install-cmd scripts that have been defined.
You can also give additional arguments to the script handler by appending --
followed by the handler arguments. e.g.
composer run-script post-install-cmd -- --check
will pass--check
along to
the script handler. Those arguments are received as CLI arg by CLI handlers,
and can be retrieved as an array via $event->getArguments()
by PHP handlers.
Writing custom commands
If you add custom scripts that do not fit one of the predefined event name
above, you can either run them with run-script or also run them as native
Composer commands. For example the handler defined below is executable by
simply running composer test
:
{
"scripts": {
"test": "phpunit"
}
}
Note: Composer's bin-dir is pushed on top of the PATH so that binaries of dependencies are easily accessible as CLI commands when writing scripts.