You've already learned how to use the command-line interface to do some things. This chapter documents all the available commands.
To get help from the command-line, call composer
or composer list
to see the complete list of commands, then --help
combined with any of those
can give you more information.
As Composer uses symfony/console you can call commands by short name if it's not ambiguous.
composer dump
calls composer dump-autoload
.
The following options are available with every command:
- --verbose (-v): Increase verbosity of messages.
- --help (-h): Display help information.
- --quiet (-q): Do not output any message.
- --no-interaction (-n): Do not ask any interactive question.
- --no-plugins: Disables plugins.
- --no-cache: Disables the use of the cache directory. Same as setting the COMPOSER_CACHE_DIR env var to /dev/null (or NUL on Windows).
- --working-dir (-d): If specified, use the given directory as working directory.
- --profile: Display timing and memory usage information
- --ansi: Force ANSI output.
- --no-ansi: Disable ANSI output.
- --version (-V): Display this application version.
- 0: OK
- 1: Generic/unknown error code
- 2: Dependency solving error code
In the Libraries chapter we looked at how to create a
composer.json
by hand. There is also an init
command available 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
- --name: Name of the package.
- --description: Description of the package.
- --author: Author name of the package.
- --type: Type of package.
- --homepage: Homepage of the package.
- --require: Package to require with a version constraint. Should be
in format
foo/bar:1.0.0
. - --require-dev: Development requirements, see --require.
- --stability (-s): Value for the
minimum-stability
field. - --license (-l): License of package.
- --repository: Provide one (or more) custom repositories. They will be stored
in the generated composer.json, and used for auto-completion when prompting for
the list of requires. Every repository can be either an HTTP URL pointing
to a
composer
repository or a JSON string which similar to what the repositories key accepts.
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.
- --prefer-source: There are two ways of downloading a package:
source
anddist
. For stable versions Composer will use thedist
by default. Thesource
is a version control repository. If--prefer-source
is enabled, Composer will install fromsource
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. - --prefer-dist: Reverse of
--prefer-source
, Composer will install fromdist
if possible. This can speed up installs substantially on build servers and other use cases where you typically do not run updates of the vendors. It is also a way to circumvent problems with git if you do not have a proper setup. - --dry-run: If you want to run through an installation without actually
installing a package, you can use
--dry-run
. This will simulate the installation and show you what would happen. - --dev: Install packages listed in
require-dev
(this is the default behavior). - --no-dev: Skip installing packages listed in
require-dev
. The autoloader generation skips theautoload-dev
rules. - --no-autoloader: Skips autoloader generation.
- --no-scripts: Skips execution of scripts defined in
composer.json
. - --no-progress: Removes the progress display that can mess with some terminals or scripts which don't handle backspace characters.
- --optimize-autoloader (-o): Convert PSR-0/4 autoloading to classmap to get a faster autoloader. This is recommended especially for production, but can take a bit of time to run so it is currently not done by default.
- --classmap-authoritative (-a): Autoload classes from the classmap only.
Implicitly enables
--optimize-autoloader
. - --apcu-autoloader: Use APCu to cache found/not-found classes.
- --apcu-autoloader-prefix: Use a custom prefix for the APCu autoloader cache.
Implicitly enables
--apcu-autoloader
. - --ignore-platform-reqs: ignore all platform requirements (
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill these. See also theplatform
config option. - --ignore-platform-req: ignore a specific platform requirement(
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill it.
In order to get the latest versions of the dependencies and to update the
composer.lock
file, you should use the update
command. This command is also
aliased as upgrade
as it does the same as upgrade
does if you are thinking
of apt-get
or similar package managers.
php composer.phar update
This will resolve all dependencies of the project and write the exact versions
into composer.lock
.
If you only want to update a few packages and not all, you can list them as such:
php composer.phar update vendor/package vendor/package2
You can also use wildcards to update a bunch of packages at once:
php composer.phar update "vendor/*"
If you want to downgrade a package to a specific version without changing your
composer.json you can use --with
and provide a custom version constraint:
php composer.phar update --with vendor/package:2.0.1
The custom constraint has to be a subset of the existing constraint you have, and this feature is only available for your root package dependencies.
If you only want to update the package(s) for which you provide custom constraints
using --with
, you can skip --with
and just use constraints with the partial
update syntax:
php composer.phar update vendor/package:2.0.1 vendor/package2:3.0.*
- --prefer-source: Install packages from
source
when available. - --prefer-dist: Install packages from
dist
when available. - --dry-run: Simulate the command without actually doing anything.
- --dev: Install packages listed in
require-dev
(this is the default behavior). - --no-dev: Skip installing packages listed in
require-dev
. The autoloader generation skips theautoload-dev
rules. - --no-install: Does not run the install step after updating the composer.lock file.
- --lock: Only updates the lock file hash to suppress warning about the lock file being out of date.
- --with: Temporary version constraint to add, e.g. foo/bar:1.0.0 or foo/bar=1.0.0
- --no-autoloader: Skips autoloader generation.
- --no-scripts: Skips execution of scripts defined in
composer.json
. - --no-progress: Removes the progress display that can mess with some terminals or scripts which don't handle backspace characters.
- --with-dependencies (-w): Update also dependencies of packages in the argument list, except those which are root requirements.
- --with-all-dependencies (-W): Update also dependencies of packages in the argument list, including those which are root requirements.
- --optimize-autoloader (-o): Convert PSR-0/4 autoloading to classmap to get a faster autoloader. This is recommended especially for production, but can take a bit of time to run, so it is currently not done by default.
- --classmap-authoritative (-a): Autoload classes from the classmap only.
Implicitly enables
--optimize-autoloader
. - --apcu-autoloader: Use APCu to cache found/not-found classes.
- --apcu-autoloader-prefix: Use a custom prefix for the APCu autoloader cache.
Implicitly enables
--apcu-autoloader
. - --ignore-platform-reqs: ignore all platform requirements (
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill these. See also theplatform
config option. - --ignore-platform-req: ignore a specific platform requirement(
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill it. - --prefer-stable: Prefer stable versions of dependencies.
- --prefer-lowest: Prefer lowest versions of dependencies. Useful for testing minimal
versions of requirements, generally used with
--prefer-stable
. - --interactive: Interactive interface with autocompletion to select the packages to update.
- --root-reqs: Restricts the update to your first degree dependencies.
Specifying one of the words mirrors
, lock
, or nothing
as an argument has the same effect as specifying the option --lock
, for example composer update mirrors
is exactly the same as composer update --lock
.
The require
command adds new packages to the composer.json
file from
the current directory. If no file exists one will be created on the fly.
php composer.phar require
After adding/changing the requirements, the modified requirements will be installed or updated.
If you do not want to choose requirements interactively, you can pass them to the command.
php composer.phar require "vendor/package:2.*" vendor/package2:dev-master
If you do not specify a package, composer will prompt you to search for a package, and given results, provide a list of matches to require.
- --dev: Add packages to
require-dev
. - --dry-run: Simulate the command without actually doing anything.
- --prefer-source: Install packages from
source
when available. - --prefer-dist: Install packages from
dist
when available. - --no-progress: Removes the progress display that can mess with some terminals or scripts which don't handle backspace characters.
- --no-update: Disables the automatic update of the dependencies (implies --no-install).
- --no-install: Does not run the install step after updating the composer.lock file.
- --no-scripts: Skips execution of scripts defined in
composer.json
. - --update-no-dev: Run the dependency update with the
--no-dev
option. - --update-with-dependencies (-w): Also update dependencies of the newly required packages, except those that are root requirements.
- --update-with-all-dependencies (-W): Also update dependencies of the newly required packages, including those that are root requirements.
- --ignore-platform-reqs: ignore all platform requirements (
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill these. See also theplatform
config option. - --ignore-platform-req: ignore a specific platform requirement(
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill it. - --prefer-stable: Prefer stable versions of dependencies.
- --prefer-lowest: Prefer lowest versions of dependencies. Useful for testing minimal
versions of requirements, generally used with
--prefer-stable
. - --sort-packages: Keep packages sorted in
composer.json
. - --optimize-autoloader (-o): Convert PSR-0/4 autoloading to classmap to get a faster autoloader. This is recommended especially for production, but can take a bit of time to run, so it is currently not done by default.
- --classmap-authoritative (-a): Autoload classes from the classmap only.
Implicitly enables
--optimize-autoloader
. - --apcu-autoloader: Use APCu to cache found/not-found classes.
- --apcu-autoloader-prefix: Use a custom prefix for the APCu autoloader cache.
Implicitly enables
--apcu-autoloader
.
The remove
command removes packages from the composer.json
file from
the current directory.
php composer.phar remove vendor/package vendor/package2
After removing the requirements, the modified requirements will be uninstalled.
- --dev: Remove packages from
require-dev
. - --dry-run: Simulate the command without actually doing anything.
- --no-progress: Removes the progress display that can mess with some terminals or scripts which don't handle backspace characters.
- --no-update: Disables the automatic update of the dependencies (implies --no-install).
- --no-install: Does not run the install step after updating the composer.lock file.
- --no-scripts: Skips execution of scripts defined in
composer.json
. - --update-no-dev: Run the dependency update with the --no-dev option.
- --update-with-dependencies (-w): Also update dependencies of the removed packages. (Deprecrated, is now default behavior)
- --update-with-all-dependencies (-W): Allows all inherited dependencies to be updated, including those that are root requirements.
- --ignore-platform-reqs: ignore all platform requirements (
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill these. See also theplatform
config option. - --ignore-platform-req: ignore a specific platform requirement(
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill it. - --optimize-autoloader (-o): Convert PSR-0/4 autoloading to classmap to get a faster autoloader. This is recommended especially for production, but can take a bit of time to run so it is currently not done by default.
- --classmap-authoritative (-a): Autoload classes from the classmap only.
Implicitly enables
--optimize-autoloader
. - --apcu-autoloader: Use APCu to cache found/not-found classes.
- --apcu-autoloader-prefix: Use a custom prefix for the APCu autoloader cache.
Implicitly enables
--apcu-autoloader
.
The check-platform-reqs command checks that your PHP and extensions versions match the platform requirements of the installed packages. This can be used to verify that a production server has all the extensions needed to run a project after installing it for example.
Unlike update/install, this command will ignore config.platform settings and check the real platform packages so you can be certain you have the required platform dependencies.
The global command allows you to run other commands like install
, remove
, require
or update
as if you were running them from the COMPOSER_HOME
directory.
This is merely a helper to manage a project stored in a central location that can hold CLI tools or Composer plugins that you want to have available everywhere.
This can be used to install CLI utilities globally. Here is an example:
php composer.phar global require friendsofphp/php-cs-fixer
Now the php-cs-fixer
binary is available globally. Make sure your global
vendor binaries directory is in your $PATH
environment variable, you can get its location with the following command :
php composer.phar global config bin-dir --absolute
If you wish to update the binary later on you can run a global update:
php composer.phar global update
The search command allows you to search through the current project's package repositories. Usually this will be packagist. You 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.
- --only-name (-N): Search only in name.
- --type (-t): Search for a specific package type.
To list all of the available packages, you can use the show
command.
php composer.phar show
To filter the list you can pass a package mask using wildcards.
php composer.phar show monolog/*
monolog/monolog 1.19.0 Sends your logs to files, sockets, inboxes, databases and various web services
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] https://github.com/Seldaek/monolog.git 3d4e60d0cbc4b888fe5ad223d77964428b1978da
dist : [zip] https://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
- --all : List all packages available in all your repositories.
- --installed (-i): List the packages that are installed (this is enabled by default, and deprecated).
- --locked: List the locked packages from composer.lock.
- --platform (-p): List only platform packages (php & extensions).
- --available (-a): List available packages only.
- --self (-s): List the root package info.
- --name-only (-N): List package names only.
- --path (-P): List package paths.
- --tree (-t): List your dependencies as a tree. If you pass a package name it will show the dependency tree for that package.
- --latest (-l): List all installed packages including their latest version.
- --outdated (-o): Implies --latest, but this lists only packages that have a newer version available.
- --no-dev: Filters dev dependencies from the package list.
- --minor-only (-m): Use with --latest. Only shows packages that have minor SemVer-compatible updates.
- --direct (-D): Restricts the list of packages to your direct dependencies.
- --strict: Return a non-zero exit code when there are outdated packages.
- --format (-f): Lets you pick between text (default) or json output format.
The outdated
command shows a list of installed packages that have updates available,
including their current and latest versions. This is basically an alias for
composer show -lo
.
The color coding is as such:
- green (=): Dependency is in the latest version and is up to date.
- yellow (
~
): Dependency has a new version available that includes backwards compatibility breaks according to semver, so upgrade when you can but it may involve work. - red (!): Dependency has a new version that is semver-compatible and you should upgrade it.
- --all (-a): Show all packages, not just outdated (alias for
composer show -l
). - --direct (-D): Restricts the list of packages to your direct dependencies.
- --strict: Returns non-zero exit code if any package is outdated.
- --minor-only (-m): Only shows packages that have minor SemVer-compatible updates.
- --format (-f): Lets you pick between text (default) or json output format.
- --no-dev: Do not show outdated dev dependencies.
- --locked: Shows updates for packages from the lock file, regardless of what is currently in vendor dir.
The browse
(aliased to home
) opens a package's repository URL or homepage
in your browser.
- --homepage (-H): Open the homepage instead of the repository URL.
- --show (-s): Only show the homepage or repository URL.
Lists all packages suggested by currently installed set of packages. You can
optionally pass one or multiple package names in the format of vendor/package
to limit output to suggestions made by those packages only.
Use the --by-package
(default) or --by-suggestion
flags to group the output by
the package offering the suggestions or the suggested packages respectively.
If you only want a list of suggested package names, use --list
.
- --by-package: Groups output by suggesting package (default).
- --by-suggestion: Groups output by suggested package.
- --all: Show suggestions from all dependencies, including transitive ones (by default only direct dependencies' suggestions are shown).
- --list: Show only list of suggested package names.
- --no-dev: Excludes suggestions from
require-dev
packages.
Discover how to help fund the maintenance of your dependencies. This lists all funding links from the installed dependencies.
The depends
command tells you which other packages depend on a certain
package. As with installation require-dev
relationships are only considered
for the root package.
php composer.phar depends doctrine/lexer
doctrine/annotations v1.2.7 requires doctrine/lexer (1.*)
doctrine/common v2.6.1 requires doctrine/lexer (1.*)
You can optionally specify a version constraint after the package to limit the search.
Add the --tree
or -t
flag to show a recursive tree of why the package is
depended upon, for example:
php composer.phar depends psr/log -t
psr/log 1.0.0 Common interface for logging libraries
|- aboutyou/app-sdk 2.6.11 (requires psr/log 1.0.*)
| `- __root__ (requires aboutyou/app-sdk ^2.6)
|- monolog/monolog 1.17.2 (requires psr/log ~1.0)
| `- laravel/framework v5.2.16 (requires monolog/monolog ~1.11)
| `- __root__ (requires laravel/framework ^5.2)
`- symfony/symfony v3.0.2 (requires psr/log ~1.0)
`- __root__ (requires symfony/symfony ^3.0)
- --recursive (-r): Recursively resolves up to the root package.
- --tree (-t): Prints the results as a nested tree, implies -r.
The prohibits
command tells you which packages are blocking a given package
from being installed. Specify a version constraint to verify whether upgrades
can be performed in your project, and if not why not. See the following
example:
php composer.phar prohibits symfony/symfony 3.1
laravel/framework v5.2.16 requires symfony/var-dumper (2.8.*|3.0.*)
Note that you can also specify platform requirements, for example to check whether you can upgrade your server to PHP 8.0:
php composer.phar prohibits php:8
doctrine/cache v1.6.0 requires php (~5.5|~7.0)
doctrine/common v2.6.1 requires php (~5.5|~7.0)
doctrine/instantiator 1.0.5 requires php (>=5.3,<8.0-DEV)
As with depends
you can request a recursive lookup, which will list all
packages depending on the packages that cause the conflict.
- --recursive (-r): Recursively resolves up to the root package.
- --tree (-t): Prints the results as a nested tree, implies -r.
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
- --no-check-all: Do not emit a warning if requirements in
composer.json
use unbound or overly strict version constraints. - --no-check-lock: Do not emit an error if
composer.lock
exists and is not up to date. - --no-check-publish: Do not emit an error if
composer.json
is unsuitable for publishing as a package on Packagist but is otherwise valid. - --with-dependencies: Also validate the composer.json of all installed dependencies.
- --strict: Return a non-zero exit code for warnings as well as errors.
If you often need to modify the code of your dependencies and they are
installed from source, the status
command allows you to check if you have
local changes in any of them.
php composer.phar status
With the --verbose
option you get some more information about what was
changed:
php composer.phar status -v
You have changes in the following dependencies:
vendor/seld/jsonlint:
M README.mdown
To update Composer itself to the latest version, run the self-update
command. It will replace your composer.phar
with the latest version.
php composer.phar self-update
If you would like to instead update to a specific release specify it:
php composer.phar self-update 1.0.0-alpha7
If you have installed Composer for your entire system (see global installation),
you may have to run the command with root
privileges
sudo -H composer self-update
If Composer was not installed as a PHAR, this command is not available. (This is sometimes the case when Composer was installed by an operating system package manager.)
- --rollback (-r): Rollback to the last version you had installed.
- --clean-backups: Delete old backups during an update. This makes the current version of Composer the only backup available after the update.
- --no-progress: Do not output download progress.
- --update-keys: Prompt user for a key update.
- --stable: Force an update to the stable channel.
- --preview: Force an update to the preview channel.
- --snapshot: Force an update to the snapshot channel.
- --1: Force an update to the stable channel, but only use 1.x versions
- --2: Force an update to the stable channel, but only use 2.x versions
- --set-channel-only: Only store the channel as the default one and then exit
The config
command allows you to edit composer config settings and repositories
in either the local composer.json
file or the global config.json
file.
Additionally it lets you edit most properties in the local composer.json
.
php composer.phar config --list
config [options] [setting-key] [setting-value1] ... [setting-valueN]
setting-key
is a configuration option name and setting-value1
is a
configuration value. For settings that can take an array of values (like
github-protocols
), more than one setting-value arguments are allowed.
You can also edit the values of the following properties:
description
, homepage
, keywords
, license
, minimum-stability
,
name
, prefer-stable
, type
and version
.
See the Config chapter for valid configuration options.
- --global (-g): Operate on the global config file located at
$COMPOSER_HOME/config.json
by default. Without this option, this command affects the local composer.json file or a file specified by--file
. - --editor (-e): Open the local composer.json file using in a text editor as
defined by the
EDITOR
env variable. With the--global
option, this opens the global config file. - --auth (-a): Affect auth config file (only used for --editor).
- --unset: Remove the configuration element named by
setting-key
. - --list (-l): Show the list of current config variables. With the
--global
option this lists the global configuration only. - --file="..." (-f): Operate on a specific file instead of composer.json. Note
that this cannot be used in conjunction with the
--global
option. - --absolute: Returns absolute paths when fetching
*-dir
config values instead of relative. - --json: JSON decode the setting value, to be used with
extra.*
keys. - --merge: Merge the setting value with the current value, to be used with
extra.*
keys in combination with--json
.
In addition to modifying the config section, the config
command also supports making
changes to the repositories section by using it the following way:
php composer.phar config repositories.foo vcs https://github.com/foo/bar
If your repository requires more configuration options, you can instead pass its JSON representation :
php composer.phar config repositories.foo '{"type": "vcs", "url": "http://svn.example.org/my-project/", "trunk-path": "master"}'
In addition to modifying the config section, the config
command also supports making
changes to the extra section by using it the following way:
php composer.phar config extra.foo.bar value
The dots indicate array nesting, a max depth of 3 levels is allowed though. The above
would set "extra": { "foo": { "bar": "value" } }
.
If you have a complex value to add/modify, you can use the --json
and --merge
flags
to edit extra fields as json:
php composer.phar config --json extra.foo.bar '{"baz": true, "qux": []}'
You can use Composer to create new projects from an existing package. This is
the equivalent of doing a git clone/svn checkout followed by a composer install
of the vendors.
There are several applications for this:
- You can deploy application packages.
- You can check out any package and start developing on patches for example.
- Projects with multiple developers can use this feature to bootstrap the initial application for development.
To create a new project using Composer you can use the create-project
command.
Pass it a package name, and the directory to create the project in. You can also
provide a version as third argument, otherwise the latest version is used.
If the directory does not currently exist, it will be created during installation.
php composer.phar create-project doctrine/orm path "2.2.*"
It is also possible to run the command without params in a directory with an
existing composer.json
file to bootstrap a project.
By default the command checks for the packages on packagist.org.
- --stability (-s): Minimum stability of package. Defaults to
stable
. - --prefer-source: Install packages from
source
when available. - --prefer-dist: Install packages from
dist
when available. - --repository: Provide a custom repository to search for the package,
which will be used instead of packagist. Can be either an HTTP URL pointing
to a
composer
repository, a path to a localpackages.json
file, or a JSON string which similar to what the repositories key accepts. You can use this multiple times to configure multiple repositories. - --add-repository: Add the custom repository in the composer.json. If a lock file is present it will be deleted and an update will be run instead of install.
- --dev: Install packages listed in
require-dev
. - --no-dev: Disables installation of require-dev packages.
- --no-scripts: Disables the execution of the scripts defined in the root package.
- --no-progress: Removes the progress display that can mess with some terminals or scripts which don't handle backspace characters.
- --no-secure-http: Disable the secure-http config option temporarily while installing the root package. Use at your own risk. Using this flag is a bad idea.
- --keep-vcs: Skip the deletion of the VCS metadata for the created project. This is mostly useful if you run the command in non-interactive mode.
- --remove-vcs: Force-remove the VCS metadata without prompting.
- --no-install: Disables installation of the vendors.
- --ignore-platform-reqs: ignore all platform requirements (
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill these. See also theplatform
config option. - --ignore-platform-req: ignore a specific platform requirement(
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and force the installation even if the local machine does not fulfill it. - --ask: Ask user to provide target directory for new project.
If you need to update the autoloader because of new classes in a classmap
package for example, you can use dump-autoload
to do that without having to
go through an install or update.
Additionally, it can dump an optimized autoloader that converts PSR-0/4 packages into classmap ones for performance reasons. In large applications with many classes, the autoloader can take up a substantial portion of every request's time. Using classmaps for everything is less convenient in development, but using this option you can still use PSR-0/4 for convenience and classmaps for performance.
- --no-scripts: Skips the execution of all scripts defined in
composer.json
file. - --optimize (-o): Convert PSR-0/4 autoloading to classmap to get a faster autoloader. This is recommended especially for production, but can take a bit of time to run, so it is currently not done by default.
- --classmap-authoritative (-a): Autoload classes from the classmap only.
Implicitly enables
--optimize
. - --apcu: Use APCu to cache found/not-found classes.
- --apcu-prefix: Use a custom prefix for the APCu autoloader cache.
Implicitly enables
--apcu
. - --no-dev: Disables autoload-dev rules.
- --ignore-platform-reqs: ignore all
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
requirements and skip the platform check for these. See also theplatform
config option. - --ignore-platform-req: ignore a specific platform requirement (
php
,hhvm
,lib-*
andext-*
) and skip the platform check for it.
Deletes all content from Composer's cache directories.
Lists the name, version and license of every package installed. Use
--format=json
to get machine-readable output.
- --format: Format of the output: text, json or summary (default: "text")
- --no-dev: Remove dev dependencies from the output
- --timeout: Set the script timeout in seconds, or 0 for no timeout.
- --dev: Sets the dev mode.
- --no-dev: Disable dev mode.
- --list (-l): List user defined scripts.
To run scripts manually you can use this command, give it the script name and optionally any required arguments.
Executes a vendored binary/script. You can execute any command and this will ensure that the Composer bin-dir is pushed on your PATH before the command runs.
- --list (-l): List the available composer binaries.
If you think you found a bug, or something is behaving strangely, you might
want to run the diagnose
command to perform automated checks for many common
problems.
php composer.phar diagnose
This command is used to generate a zip/tar archive for a given package in a given version. It can also be used to archive your entire project without excluded/ignored files.
php composer.phar archive vendor/package 2.0.21 --format=zip
- --format (-f): Format of the resulting archive: tar or zip (default: "tar")
- --dir: Write the archive to this directory (default: ".")
- --file: Write the archive with the given file name.
To get more information about a certain command, you can use help
.
php composer.phar help install
Command-line completion can be enabled by following instructions on this page.
You can set a number of environment variables that override certain settings.
Whenever possible it is recommended to specify these settings in the config
section of composer.json
instead. It is worth noting that the env vars will
always take precedence over the values specified in composer.json
.
By setting the COMPOSER
env variable it is possible to set the filename of
composer.json
to something else.
For example:
COMPOSER=composer-other.json php composer.phar install
The generated lock file will use the same name: composer-other.lock
in this example.
If set to 1, this env disables the warning about running commands as root/super user. It also disables automatic clearing of sudo sessions, so you should really only set this if you use Composer as super user at all times like in docker containers.
If set to 1, this env allows running Composer when the Xdebug extension is enabled, without restarting PHP without it.
The COMPOSER_AUTH
var allows you to set up authentication as an environment variable.
The contents of the variable should be a JSON formatted object containing http-basic,
github-oauth, bitbucket-oauth, ... objects as needed,
and following the
spec from the config.
By setting this option you can change the bin
(Vendor Binaries)
directory to something other than vendor/bin
.
The COMPOSER_CACHE_DIR
var allows you to change the Composer cache directory,
which is also configurable via the cache-dir
option.
By default, it points to $COMPOSER_HOME/cache
on *nix and macOS, and
C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\Composer
(or %LOCALAPPDATA%/Composer
) on Windows.
By setting this environmental value, you can set a path to a certificate bundle file to be used during SSL/TLS peer verification.
If set to 1, this env suppresses a warning when Composer is running with the Xdebug extension enabled.
This env var controls the discard-changes
config option.
The COMPOSER_HOME
var allows you to change the Composer home directory. This
is a hidden, global (per-user on the machine) directory that is shared between
all projects.
By default, it points to C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\Composer
on Windows
and /Users/<user>/.composer
on macOS. On *nix systems that follow the XDG Base
Directory Specifications,
it points to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/composer
. On other *nix systems, it points to
/home/<user>/.composer
.
You may put a config.json
file into the location which COMPOSER_HOME
points
to. Composer will merge this configuration with your project's composer.json
when you run the install
and update
commands.
This file allows you to set repositories and configuration for the user's projects.
In case global configuration matches local configuration, the local
configuration in the project's composer.json
always wins.
Defaults to 1
. If set to 0
, Composer will not create .htaccess
files in the
composer home, cache, and data directories.
If set, the value is used as php's memory_limit.
If set to 1, this env changes the default path repository strategy to mirror
instead
of symlink
. As it is the default strategy being set it can still be overwritten by
repository options.
If set to 1, this env var will make Composer behave as if you passed the
--no-interaction
flag to every command. This can be set on build boxes/CI.
This env var controls the time Composer waits for commands (such as git commands) to finish executing. The default value is 300 seconds (5 minutes).
By setting this var you can specify the version of the root package, if it
cannot be guessed from VCS info and is not present in composer.json
.
By setting this var you can make Composer install the dependencies into a
directory other than vendor
.
If you are using Composer from behind an HTTP proxy, you can use the standard
http_proxy
or HTTP_PROXY
env vars. Set it to the URL of your proxy.
Many operating systems already set this variable for you.
Using http_proxy
(lowercased) or even defining both might be preferable since
some tools like git or curl will only use the lower-cased http_proxy
version.
Alternatively you can also define the git proxy using
git config --global http.proxy <proxy url>
.
If you are using Composer in a non-CLI context (i.e. integration into a CMS or
similar use case), and need to support proxies, please provide the CGI_HTTP_PROXY
environment variable instead. See httpoxy.org for further
details.
If you use a proxy, but it does not support the request_fulluri flag, then you
should set this env var to false
or 0
to prevent Composer from setting the
request_fulluri option.
If you use a proxy, but it does not support the request_fulluri flag for HTTPS
requests, then you should set this env var to false
or 0
to prevent Composer
from setting the request_fulluri option.
If set, makes the self-update command write the new Composer phar file into that path instead of overwriting itself. Useful for updating Composer on read-only filesystem.
If you are behind a proxy and would like to disable it for certain domains, you
can use the no_proxy
or NO_PROXY
env var. Set it to a comma separated list of
domains the proxy should not be used for.
The env var accepts domains, IP addresses, and IP address blocks in CIDR
notation. You can restrict the filter to a particular port (e.g. :80
). You
can also set it to *
to ignore the proxy for all HTTP requests.
If set to 1
, disables network access (best effort). This can be used for debugging or
to run Composer on a plane or a starship with poor connectivity.
If set to prime
, GitHub VCS repositories will prime the cache, so it can then be used
fully offline with 1
.
If set to 1
, outputs information about events being dispatched, which can be
useful for plugin authors to identify what is firing when exactly.