- What is a script?
- Event names
- Defining scripts
- Event classes
- Running scripts manually
- Writing custom commands
- Managing the process timeout
- Referencing scripts
- Calling Composer commands
- Executing PHP scripts
- Setting environment variables
- Custom descriptions.
Scripts(脚本)#
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.
As of Composer 2.5 scripts can also be Symfony Console Command classes, which allows you to easily run them including passing options. This is however not recommended for handling events.
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 with a lock file present. - post-install-cmd: occurs after the
install
command has been executed with a lock file present. - pre-update-cmd: occurs before the
update
command is executed, or before theinstall
command is executed without a lock file present. - post-update-cmd: occurs after the
update
command has been executed, or after theinstall
command has been executed without a lock file present. - pre-status-cmd: occurs before the
status
command is executed. - post-status-cmd: occurs after the
status
command has been executed. - pre-archive-cmd: occurs before the
archive
command is executed. - post-archive-cmd: occurs after the
archive
command has been 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 has been 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 (but before its dependencies are installed). - post-create-project-cmd: occurs after the
create-project
command has been executed.
Installer Events#
- pre-operations-exec: occurs before the install/upgrade/.. operations are executed when installing a lock file. Plugins that need to hook into this event will need to be installed globally to be usable, as otherwise they would not be loaded yet when a fresh install of a project happens.
Package Events#
- pre-package-install: occurs before a package is installed.
- post-package-install: occurs after a package has been installed.
- pre-package-update: occurs before a package is updated.
- post-package-update: occurs after a package has been updated.
- pre-package-uninstall: occurs before a package is uninstalled.
- post-package-uninstall: occurs after a package has been uninstalled.
Plugin Events#
- init: occurs after a Composer instance is done being initialized.
- 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
HttpDownloader
object prior to downloading files based on the URL to be downloaded. - post-file-download: occurs after package dist files are downloaded and allows you to perform additional checks on the file if required.
- pre-command-run: occurs before a command is executed and allows you to
manipulate the
InputInterface
object's options and arguments to tweak a command's behavior. - pre-pool-create: occurs before the Pool of packages is created, and lets you filter the list of packages that is going to enter the Solver.
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 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 and commands containing defined callbacks must be autoloadable via Composer's autoload functionality.
- Callbacks can only autoload classes from psr-0, psr-4 and classmap definitions. If a defined callback relies on functions defined outside of a class, the callback itself is responsible for loading the file containing these functions.
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-autoload-dump": [
"MyVendor\\MyClass::postAutoloadDump"
],
"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
}
}
Note: During a Composer install
or update
command run, a variable named
COMPOSER_DEV_MODE
will be added to the environment. If the command was run
with the --no-dev
flag, this variable will be set to 0, otherwise it will be
set to 1. The variable is also available while dump-autoload
runs, and it
will be set to the same as the last install
or update
was run in.
Event classes#
When an event is fired, your PHP callback receives as first argument a
Composer\EventDispatcher\Event
object. This object has a getName()
method
that lets you retrieve the event name.
Depending on the script types 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:
- init:
Composer\EventDispatcher\Event
- command:
Composer\Plugin\CommandEvent
- pre-file-download:
Composer\Plugin\PreFileDownloadEvent
- post-file-download:
Composer\Plugin\PostFileDownloadEvent
- init:
Running scripts manually#
If you would like to run the scripts for an event manually, the syntax is:
php composer.phar run-script [--dev] [--no-dev] script
For example composer run-script post-install-cmd
will run any
post-install-cmd scripts and plugins 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
running composer test
:
{
"scripts": {
"test": "phpunit",
"do-something": "MyVendor\\MyClass::doSomething"
"my-cmd": "MyVendor\\MyCommand"
}
}
Similar to the run-script
command you can give additional arguments to scripts,
e.g. composer test -- --filter <pattern>
will pass --filter <pattern>
along
to the phpunit
script.
Using a PHP method via composer do-something arg
lets you execute a
static function doSomething(\Composer\Script\Event $event)
and arg
becomes
available in $event->getArguments()
. This however does not let you easily pass
custom options in the form of --flags
.
Using a symfony/console Command
class you can define and access arguments and options more easily.
For example with the command below you can then simply call composer my-cmd --arbitrary-flag
without even the need for a --
separator. To be detected
as symfony/console commands the class name must end with Command
and extend
symfony's Command
class. Also note that this will run using Composer's built-in
symfony/console version which may not match the one you have required in your
project, and may change between Composer minor releases. If you need more
safety guarantees you should rather use your own binary file that runs your own
symfony/console version in isolation in its own process then.
<?php
namespace MyVendor;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Command\Command;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Input\InputArgument;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Input\InputInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Input\InputOption;
use Symfony\Component\Console\Output\OutputInterface;
class MyCommand extends Command
{
protected function configure(): void
{
$this->setDefinition([
new InputOption('arbitrary-flag', null, InputOption::VALUE_NONE, 'Example flag'),
new InputArgument('foo', InputArgument::OPTIONAL, 'Optional arg'),
]);
}
public function execute(InputInterface $input, OutputInterface $output): int
{
if ($input->getOption('arbitrary-flag')) {
$output->writeln('The flag was used')
}
return 0;
}
}
Note: Before executing scripts, Composer's bin-dir is temporarily pushed on top of the PATH environment variable so that binaries of dependencies are directly accessible. In this example no matter if the
phpunit
binary is actually invendor/bin/phpunit
orbin/phpunit
it will be found and executed.
Managing the process timeout#
Although Composer is not intended to manage long-running processes and other such aspects of PHP projects, it can sometimes be handy to disable the process timeout on custom commands. This timeout defaults to 300 seconds and can be overridden in a variety of ways depending on the desired effect:
- disable it for all commands using the config key
process-timeout
, - disable it for the current or future invocations of composer using the
environment variable
COMPOSER_PROCESS_TIMEOUT
, - for a specific invocation using the
--timeout
flag of therun-script
command, - using a static helper for specific scripts.
To disable the timeout for specific scripts with the static helper directly in composer.json:
{
"scripts": {
"test": [
"Composer\\Config::disableProcessTimeout",
"phpunit"
]
}
}
To disable the timeout for every script on a given project, you can use the composer.json configuration:
{
"config": {
"process-timeout": 0
}
}
It's also possible to set the global environment variable to disable the timeout of all following scripts in the current terminal environment:
export COMPOSER_PROCESS_TIMEOUT=0
To disable the timeout of a single script call, you must use the run-script
composer
command and specify the --timeout
parameter:
php composer.phar run-script --timeout=0 test
Referencing scripts#
To enable script re-use and avoid duplicates, you can call a script from another
one by prefixing the command name with @
:
{
"scripts": {
"test": [
"@clearCache",
"phpunit"
],
"clearCache": "rm -rf cache/*"
}
}
You can also refer a script and pass it new arguments:
{
"scripts": {
"tests": "phpunit",
"testsVerbose": "@tests -vvv"
}
}
Calling Composer commands#
To call Composer commands, you can use @composer
which will automatically
resolve to whatever composer.phar is currently being used:
{
"scripts": {
"test": [
"@composer install",
"phpunit"
]
}
}
One limitation of this is that you can not call multiple composer commands in
a row like @composer install && @composer foo
. You must split them up in a
JSON array of commands.
Executing PHP scripts#
To execute PHP scripts, you can use @php
which will automatically
resolve to whatever php process is currently being used:
{
"scripts": {
"test": [
"@php script.php",
"phpunit"
]
}
}
One limitation of this is that you can not call multiple commands in
a row like @php install && @php foo
. You must split them up in a
JSON array of commands.
You can also call a shell/bash script, which will have the path to
the PHP executable available in it as a PHP_BINARY
env var.
Setting environment variables#
To set an environment variable in a cross-platform way, you can use @putenv
:
{
"scripts": {
"install-phpstan": [
"@putenv COMPOSER=phpstan-composer.json",
"composer install --prefer-dist"
]
}
}
Custom descriptions.#
You can set custom script descriptions with the following in your composer.json
:
{
"scripts-descriptions": {
"test": "Run all tests!"
}
}
The descriptions are used in composer list
or composer run -l
commands to
describe what the scripts do when the command is run.
Note: You can only set custom descriptions of custom commands.