315 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
315 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
<!--
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tagline: Solving problems
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-->
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# Troubleshooting
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This is a list of common pitfalls on using Composer, and how to avoid them.
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## General
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1. Before asking anyone, run [`composer diagnose`](../03-cli.md#diagnose) to check
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for common problems. If it all checks out, proceed to the next steps.
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2. When facing any kind of problems using Composer, be sure to **work with the
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latest version**. See [self-update](../03-cli.md#self-update) for details.
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3. Make sure you have no problems with your setup by running the installer's
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checks via `curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php -- --check`.
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4. Ensure you're **installing vendors straight from your `composer.json`** via
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`rm -rf vendor && composer update -v` when troubleshooting, excluding any
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possible interferences with existing vendor installations or `composer.lock`
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entries.
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5. Try clearing Composer's cache by running `composer clear-cache`.
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## Package not found
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1. Double-check you **don't have typos** in your `composer.json` or repository
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branches and tag names.
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2. Be sure to **set the right
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[minimum-stability](../04-schema.md#minimum-stability)**. To get started or be
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sure this is no issue, set `minimum-stability` to "dev".
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3. Packages **not coming from [Packagist](https://packagist.org/)** should
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always be **defined in the root package** (the package depending on all
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vendors).
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4. Use the **same vendor and package name** throughout all branches and tags of
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your repository, especially when maintaining a third party fork and using
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`replace`.
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5. If you are updating to a recently published version of a package, be aware that
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Packagist has a delay of up to 1 minute before new packages are visible to Composer.
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6. If you are updating a single package, it may depend on newer versions itself.
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In this case add the `--with-dependencies` argument **or** add all dependencies which
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need an update to the command.
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## Package not found on travis-ci.org
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1. Check the ["Package not found"](#package-not-found) item above.
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2. If the package tested is a dependency of one of its dependencies (cyclic
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dependency), the problem might be that Composer is not able to detect the version
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of the package properly. If it is a git clone it is generally alright and Composer
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will detect the version of the current branch, but travis does shallow clones so
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that process can fail when testing pull requests and feature branches in general.
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The best solution is to define the version you are on via an environment variable
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called COMPOSER_ROOT_VERSION. You set it to `dev-master` for example to define
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the root package's version as `dev-master`.
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Use: `before_script: COMPOSER_ROOT_VERSION=dev-master composer install` to export
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the variable for the call to composer.
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## Package not found in a Jenkins-build
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1. Check the ["Package not found"](#package-not-found) item above.
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2. Reason for failing is similar to the problem which can occur on travis-ci.org: The
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git-clone / checkout within Jenkins leaves the branch in a "detached HEAD"-state. As
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a result, Composer is not able to identify the version of the current checked out branch
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and may not be able to resolve a cyclic dependency. To solve this problem, you can use
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the "Additional Behaviours" -> "Check out to specific local branch" in your Git-settings
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for your Jenkins-job, where your "local branch" shall be the same branch as you are
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checking out. Using this, the checkout will not be in detached state any more and cyclic
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dependency is recognized correctly.
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## I have a dependency which contains a "repositories" definition in its composer.json, but it seems to be ignored.
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The [`repositories`](../04-schema.md#repositories) configuration property is defined as [root-only]
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(../04-schema.md#root-package). It is not inherited. You can read more about the reasons behind this in the "[why can't
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composer load repositories recursively?](../faqs/why-can't-composer-load-repositories-recursively.md)" article.
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The simplest work-around to this limitation, is moving or duplicating the `repositories` definition into your root
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composer.json.
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## I have locked a dependency to a specific commit but get unexpected results.
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While Composer supports locking dependencies to a specific commit using the `#commit-ref` syntax, there are certain
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caveats that one should take into account. The most important one is [documented](../04-schema.md#package-links), but
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frequently overlooked:
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> **Note:** While this is convenient at times, it should not be how you use
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> packages in the long term because it comes with a technical limitation. The
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> composer.json metadata will still be read from the branch name you specify
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> before the hash. Because of that in some cases it will not be a practical
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> workaround, and you should always try to switch to tagged releases as soon
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> as you can.
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There is no simple work-around to this limitation. It is therefore strongly recommended that you do not use it.
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## Need to override a package version
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Let's say your project depends on package A, which in turn depends on a specific
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version of package B (say 0.1). But you need a different version of said package B (say 0.11).
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You can fix this by aliasing version 0.11 to 0.1:
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composer.json:
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```json
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{
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"require": {
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"A": "0.2",
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"B": "0.11 as 0.1"
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}
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}
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```
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See [aliases](aliases.md) for more information.
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## Memory limit errors
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If composer shows memory errors on some commands:
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`PHP Fatal error: Allowed memory size of XXXXXX bytes exhausted <...>`
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Check first that XDebug is not loaded in your `php.ini` by running
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`composer diagnose`. If XDebug is loaded, you should disable it by
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commenting the line `zend_extension=path/to/xdebug` in your `php.ini`.
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Don't forget to enable XDebug again after using Composer, if you need it.
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If composer still raises the error, the PHP `memory_limit` should be increased.
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> **Note:** Composer internally increases the `memory_limit` to `1G`.
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To get the current `memory_limit` value, run:
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```sh
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php -r "echo ini_get('memory_limit').PHP_EOL;"
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```
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Try increasing the limit in your `php.ini` file (ex. `/etc/php5/cli/php.ini` for
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Debian-like systems):
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```ini
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; Use -1 for unlimited or define an explicit value like 2G
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memory_limit = -1
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```
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Or, you can increase the limit with a command-line argument:
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```sh
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php -d memory_limit=-1 composer.phar <...>
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```
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## Xdebug impact on Composer
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Running Composer console commands while the php extension "xdebug" is loaded reduces speed considerably.
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This is even the case when all "xdebug" related features are disabled per php.ini flags,
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but the php extension itself is loaded into the PHP engine.
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Compared to a cli command run with "xdebug" enabled a speed improvement by a factor of up to 3 is not uncommon.
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> **Note:** This is a general issue when running PHP with "xdebug" enabled. You shouldn't
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> load the extension in production like environments per se.
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Disable "xdebug" in your `php.ini` (ex. `/etc/php5/cli/php.ini` for Debian-like systems) by
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locating the related `zend_extension` directive and prepending it with `;` (semicolon):
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```sh
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;zend_extension = "/path/to/my/xdebug.so"
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```
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If you disable this extension and still want it to be added on `php` cli command, you can deal with aliases on *nix systems:
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```sh
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# Load xdebug Zend extension with php command
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alias php='php -dzend_extension=xdebug.so'
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# PHPUnit needs xdebug for coverage. In this case, just make an alias with php command prefix.
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alias phpunit='php $(which phpunit)'
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```
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With that, all php binaries called directly **will not** have xdebug enabled
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but you will still have it by prefixing them with php command.
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Example:
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```sh
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# Will NOT have xdebug enabled
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composer update
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# Will have xdebug enabled by alias
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php /usr/local/bin/composer update
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```
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If you do not want to disable it and want to get rid of the warning you can also define the
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[COMPOSER_DISABLE_XDEBUG_WARN](../03-cli.md#composer-disable-xdebug-warn) environment variable.
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## "The system cannot find the path specified" (Windows)
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1. Open regedit.
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2. Search for an `AutoRun` key inside `HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Command Processor`,
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`HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Command Processor`
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or `HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Command Processor`.
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3. Check if it contains any path to non-existent file, if it's the case, just remove them.
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## API rate limit and OAuth tokens
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Because of GitHub's rate limits on their API it can happen that Composer prompts
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for authentication asking your username and password so it can go ahead with its work.
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If you would prefer not to provide your GitHub credentials to Composer you can
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manually create a token using the following procedure:
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1. [Create](https://github.com/settings/tokens) an OAuth token on GitHub.
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[Read more](https://github.com/blog/1509-personal-api-tokens) on this.
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2. Add it to the configuration running `composer config -g github-oauth.github.com <oauthtoken>`
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Now Composer should install/update without asking for authentication.
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## proc_open(): fork failed errors
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If composer shows proc_open() fork failed on some commands:
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`PHP Fatal error: Uncaught exception 'ErrorException' with message 'proc_open(): fork failed - Cannot allocate memory' in phar`
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This could be happening because the VPS runs out of memory and has no Swap space enabled.
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```sh
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free -m
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total used free shared buffers cached
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Mem: 2048 357 1690 0 0 237
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-/+ buffers/cache: 119 1928
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Swap: 0 0 0
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```
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To enable the swap you can use for example:
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```sh
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/bin/dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/swap.1 bs=1M count=1024
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/sbin/mkswap /var/swap.1
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/sbin/swapon /var/swap.1
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```
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## Degraded Mode
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Due to some intermittent issues on Travis and other systems, we introduced a
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degraded network mode which helps Composer finish successfully but disables
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a few optimizations. This is enabled automatically when an issue is first
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detected. If you see this issue sporadically you probably don't have to worry
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(a slow or overloaded network can also cause those time outs), but if it
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appears repeatedly you might want to look at the options below to identify
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and resolve it.
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If you have been pointed to this page, you want to check a few things:
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- If you are using ESET antivirus, go in "Advanced Settings" and disable "HTTP-scanner"
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under "web access protection"
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- If you are using IPv6, try disabling it. If that solves your issues, get in touch
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with your ISP or server host, the problem is not at the Packagist level but in the
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routing rules between you and Packagist (i.e. the internet at large). The best way to get
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these fixed is raise awareness to the network engineers that have the power to fix it.
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Take a look at the next section for IPv6 workarounds.
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- If none of the above helped, please report the error.
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## Operation timed out (IPv6 issues)
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You may run into errors if IPv6 is not configured correctly. A common error is:
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```
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The "https://getcomposer.org/version" file could not be downloaded: failed to
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open stream: Operation timed out
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```
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We recommend you fix your IPv6 setup. If that is not possible, you can try the
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following workarounds:
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**Workaround Linux:**
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On linux, it seems that running this command helps to make ipv4 traffic have a
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higher prio than ipv6, which is a better alternative than disabling ipv6 entirely:
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```Bash
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sudo sh -c "echo 'precedence ::ffff:0:0/96 100' >> /etc/gai.conf"
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```
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**Workaround Windows:**
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On windows the only way is to disable ipv6 entirely I am afraid (either in windows or in your home router).
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**Workaround Mac OS X:**
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Get name of your network device:
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```
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networksetup -listallnetworkservices
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```
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Disable IPv6 on that device (in this case "Wi-Fi"):
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```
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networksetup -setv6off Wi-Fi
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```
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Run composer ...
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You can enable IPv6 again with:
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```
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networksetup -setv6automatic Wi-Fi
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```
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That said, if this fixes your problem, please talk to your ISP about it to
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try and resolve the routing errors. That's the best way to get things resolved
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for everyone.
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