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