rtens / fido
Asset fetcher for PHP
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Type:composer-plugin
Requires
- php: >=5.3
- composer-plugin-api: 1.0.0
Requires (Dev)
- composer/composer: ~1.0@dev
- watoki/scrut: *
This package is not auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-12-17 06:02:15 UTC
README
A simple composer plugin that simplifies installing packages without dependency management support (e.g. assets from URLs or git repositories).
Installation
Because of composer's plugin system, you need to install fido globally
composer global require "rtens/fido:~1.0"
(there is a pull request to fix that)
Usage
The requirement definitions go into the extra
object using the ke fido-fetch
. Here is an example with two packages.
"extra": { "fido-fetch": { "base-dir": "web/assets/vendor", // defaults to "assets/vendor" "jquery": { "source": "https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.1.js", "type": "file", // optional, inferred from source "target": "jquery.js" // Optional, defaults to file name }, "phantom.js runner": { "source": "https://github.com/jonkemp/qunit-phantomjs-runner.git", "type": "git", // optional, inferred from source "target": "phantomjs-runner", // Optional, defaults to repository name "reference": "v1.2.0" // optional, defaults to "*" } } }
This can be shortened in several steps. First, by leaving out the optional definitions.
"extra": { "fido-fetch": { "jquery": { "source": "https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.1.js", }, "phantom.js runner": { "source": "https://github.com/jonkemp/qunit-phantomjs-runner.git", } } }
To shorten it even more, the value of source
can be used as package names.
"extra": { "fido-fetch": { "https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.1.js": {}, "https://github.com/jonkemp/qunit-phantomjs-runner.git": {} } }
Finally, these definitions can also be put into the require
object (including versions for git repositories)
by prefixing them with fido-fetch:
.
"require": { "fido-fetch:https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.1.js": "*", "fido-fetch:https://github.com/jonkemp/qunit-phantomjs-runner.git": "v1.2.0" }
Dev Mode
You can also specify packages for dev-mode only using the fetch-fido-dev
and require-dev
objects.
Documentation
For a complete documentation, check out fido's executable documentation
But.. why?
Convenience, mostly.
There are of course several ways to get bootstrap, jquery and their likes into your project without bundling them with it. You could use bower or npm for example or, if you don't like javascript, you can get the the excellent bower/npm composer plugin.
But some packages, like the qunit-phantomjs-runner, don't support any dependency management system. For these cases exists
composer's package
type repository (thanks Igor for pointing that out).
Now if you would like to have these packages in another directory than vendor
, you can either symlink to them or
use the composer-custom-directory-installer plugin which lets you decide where certain packages should be installed.
This is how the composer.json
looks like with if you would require bootstrap and the qunit-phantomjs-runner with this
approach:
{ "require": { "mnsami/composer-custom-directory-installer": "1.0.*", "jquery":"2.1.1", "jonkemp/qunit-phantomjs-runner":"1.1.0" }, "extra": { "installer-paths":{ "web/assets/jquery/jquery.js": ["jquery"], "web/assets/phantomjs-runner": ["jonkemp/qunit-phantomjs-runner"] } }, "repositories": [ { "type": "package", "package": { "name": "jquery", "version": "2.1.1", "dist": { "url": "https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.1.js", "type": "file" } } }, { "type": "package", "package": { "name": "jonkemp/qunit-phantomjs-runner", "version": "1.1.0", "source": { "url": "https://github.com/jonkemp/qunit-phantomjs-runner.git", "type": "git", "reference": "tags/v1.1.0" } } } ], "minimum-stability": "dev" }
And this is actually (more or less) what fido compiles to, simply with a shorter, simpler syntax.