154 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
154 lines
5.5 KiB
Markdown
# Libraries
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This chapter will tell you how to make your library installable through
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Composer.
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## Every project is a package
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As soon as you have a `composer.json` in a directory, that directory is a
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package. When you add a [`require`](04-schema.md#require) to a project, you are
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making a package that depends on other packages. The only difference between
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your project and a library is that your project is a package without a name.
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In order to make that package installable you need to give it a name. You do
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this by adding the [`name`](04-schema.md#name) property in `composer.json`:
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```json
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{
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"name": "acme/hello-world",
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"require": {
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"monolog/monolog": "1.0.*"
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}
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}
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```
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In this case the project name is `acme/hello-world`, where `acme` is the vendor
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name. Supplying a vendor name is mandatory.
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> **Note:** If you don't know what to use as a vendor name, your GitHub
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> username is usually a good bet. While package names are case insensitive, the
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> convention is all lowercase and dashes for word separation.
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## Library Versioning
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In the vast majority of cases, you will be maintaining your library using some
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sort of version control system like git, svn, hg or fossil. In these cases,
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Composer infers versions from your VCS and you **should not** specify a version
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in your `composer.json` file. (See the [Versions article](articles/versions.md)
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to learn about how Composer uses VCS branches and tags to resolve version
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constraints.)
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If you are maintaining packages by hand (i.e., without a VCS), you'll need to
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specify the version explicitly by adding a `version` value in your `composer.json`
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file:
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```json
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{
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"version": "1.0.0"
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}
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```
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> **Note:** When you add a hardcoded version to a VCS, the version will conflict
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> with tag names. Composer will not be able to determine the version number.
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### VCS Versioning
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Composer uses your VCS's branch and tag features to resolve the version
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constraints you specify in your [`require`](04-schema.md#require) field to specific sets of files.
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When determining valid available versions, Composer looks at all of your tags
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and branches and translates their names into an internal list of options that
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it then matches against the version constraint you provided.
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For more on how Composer treats tags and branches and how it resolves package
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version constraints, read the [versions](articles/versions.md) article.
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## Lock file
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For your library you may commit the `composer.lock` file if you want to. This
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can help your team to always test against the same dependency versions.
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However, this lock file will not have any effect on other projects that depend
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on it. It only has an effect on the main project.
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If you do not want to commit the lock file and you are using git, add it to
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the `.gitignore`.
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## Publishing to a VCS
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Once you have a VCS repository (version control system, e.g. git) containing a
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`composer.json` file, your library is already composer-installable. In this
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example we will publish the `acme/hello-world` library on GitHub under
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`github.com/username/hello-world`.
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Now, to test installing the `acme/hello-world` package, we create a new
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project locally. We will call it `acme/blog`. This blog will depend on
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`acme/hello-world`, which in turn depends on `monolog/monolog`. We can
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accomplish this by creating a new `blog` directory somewhere, containing a
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`composer.json`:
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```json
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{
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"name": "acme/blog",
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"require": {
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"acme/hello-world": "dev-master"
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}
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}
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```
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The name is not needed in this case, since we don't want to publish the blog
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as a library. It is added here to clarify which `composer.json` is being
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described.
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Now we need to tell the blog app where to find the `hello-world` dependency.
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We do this by adding a package repository specification to the blog's
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`composer.json`:
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```json
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{
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"name": "acme/blog",
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"repositories": [
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{
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"type": "vcs",
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"url": "https://github.com/username/hello-world"
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}
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],
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"require": {
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"acme/hello-world": "dev-master"
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}
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}
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```
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For more details on how package repositories work and what other types are
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available, see [Repositories](05-repositories.md).
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That's all. You can now install the dependencies by running Composer's
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[`install`](03-cli.md#install) command!
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**Recap:** Any git/svn/hg/fossil repository containing a `composer.json` can be
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added to your project by specifying the package repository and declaring the
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dependency in the [`require`](04-schema.md#require) field.
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## Publishing to packagist
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Alright, so now you can publish packages. But specifying the VCS repository
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every time is cumbersome. You don't want to force all your users to do that.
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The other thing that you may have noticed is that we did not specify a package
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repository for `monolog/monolog`. How did that work? The answer is Packagist.
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[Packagist](https://packagist.org/) is the main package repository for
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Composer, and it is enabled by default. Anything that is published on
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Packagist is available automatically through Composer. Since
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[Monolog is on Packagist](https://packagist.org/packages/monolog/monolog), we
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can depend on it without having to specify any additional repositories.
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If we wanted to share `hello-world` with the world, we would publish it on
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Packagist as well.
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You visit [Packagist](https://packagist.org) and hit the "Submit"
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button. This will prompt you to sign up if you haven't already, and then
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allows you to submit the URL to your VCS repository, at which point Packagist
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will start crawling it. Once it is done, your package will be available to
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anyone!
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← [Basic usage](01-basic-usage.md) | [Command-line interface](03-cli.md) →
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