You've already learned how to use the command-line interface to do some things. This chapter documents all the available commands.
In the [Libraries] chapter we looked at how to create a composer.json
by hand. There is also an init
command available that makes it a bit easier to do this.
When you run the command it will interactively ask you to fill in the fields, while using some smart defaults.
$ php composer.phar init
The install
command reads the composer.json
file from the current directory, resolves the dependencies, and installs them into vendor
.
$ php composer.phar install
If there is a composer.lock
file in the current directory, it will use the exact versions from there instead of resolving them. This ensures that everyone using the library will get the same versions of the dependencies.
If there is no composer.lock
file, composer will create one after dependency resolution.
source
and dist
. For stable versions composer will use the dist
by default. The source
is a version control repository. If --prefer-source
is enabled, composer will install from source
if there is one. This is useful if you want to make a bugfix to a project and get a local git clone of the dependency directly.--dry-run
. This will simulate the installation and show you what would happen.recommend
. By passing this option you can disable that.suggest
will not be installed by default. By passing this option, you can install them.In order to get the latest versions of the dependencies and to update the composer.lock
file, you should use the update
command.
$ php composer.phar update
This will resolve all dependencies of the project and write the exact versions into composer.lock
.
source
when available.recommend
.suggest
.The search command allows you to search through the current project's package repositories. Usually this will be just packagist. You simply pass it the terms you want to search for.
$ php composer.phar search monolog
You can also search for more than one term by passing multiple arguments.
To list all of the available packages, you can use the show
command.
$ php composer.phar show
If you want to see the details of a certain package, you can pass the package name.
$ php composer.phar show monolog/monolog
name : monolog/monolog
versions : master-dev, 1.0.2, 1.0.1, 1.0.0, 1.0.0-RC1
type : library
names : monolog/monolog
source : [git] http://github.com/Seldaek/monolog.git 3d4e60d0cbc4b888fe5ad223d77964428b1978da
dist : [zip] http://github.com/Seldaek/monolog/zipball/3d4e60d0cbc4b888fe5ad223d77964428b1978da 3d4e60d0cbc4b888fe5ad223d77964428b1978da
license : MIT
autoload
psr-0
Monolog : src/
requires
php >=5.3.0
You can even pass the package version, which will tell you the details of that specific version.
$ php composer.phar show monolog/monolog 1.0.2
The depends
command tells you which other packages depend on a certain package. You can specify which link types (require
, recommend
, suggest
) should be included in the listing.
$ php composer.phar depends --link-type=require monolog/monolog
nrk/monolog-fluent
poc/poc
propel/propel
symfony/monolog-bridge
symfony/symfony
You should always run the validate
command before you commit your composer.json
file, and before you tag a release. It will check if your composer.json
is valid.
$ php composer.phar validate
To update composer itself to the latest version, just run the self-update
command. It will replace your composer.phar
with the latest version.
$ php composer.phar self-update
To get more information about a certain command, just use help
.
$ php composer.phar help install