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GitHub Action

Install PHP Dependencies with Composer

3.0.0 Latest version

Install PHP Dependencies with Composer

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Install PHP Dependencies with Composer

Installs and caches PHP dependencies with Composer, accepting arguments to configure how and what to install

Installation

Copy and paste the following snippet into your .yml file.

              

- name: Install PHP Dependencies with Composer

uses: ramsey/composer-install@3.0.0

Learn more about this action in ramsey/composer-install

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ramsey/composer-install

A GitHub Action to streamline installation of PHP dependencies with Composer.

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About

ramsey/composer-install is a GitHub Action to streamline installation of Composer dependencies in workflows. It installs your Composer dependencies and caches them for improved build times.

This project adheres to a code of conduct. By participating in this project and its community, you are expected to uphold this code.

Dependencies

This GitHub Action requires PHP and Composer. One way to ensure you have both is to use the Setup PHP GitHub Action.

The step that sets up PHP and Composer for your environment must come before the ramsey/composer-install step.

Usage

Use ramsey/composer-install as step within a job. This example also shows use of the Setup PHP action as a step.

- uses: "shivammathur/setup-php@v2"
  with:
    php-version: "latest"
- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"

💡 There is no need to set up a separate caching step since ramsey/composer-install handles this for you.

Input Parameters

dependency-versions

The dependency-versions input parameter allows you to select whether the job should install the locked, highest, or lowest versions of Composer dependencies.

Valid values are:

  • locked: (default) installs the locked versions of Composer dependencies (equivalent to running composer install)

  • highest: installs the highest versions of Composer dependencies (equivalent to running composer update)

  • lowest: installs the lowest versions of Composer dependencies (equivalent to running composer update --prefer-lowest --prefer-stable)

For example:

- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"
  with:
    dependency-versions: "lowest"

composer-options

ramsey/composer-install always passes the --no-interaction, --no-progress, and --ansi options to the composer command. If you'd like to pass additional options, you may use the composer-options input parameter.

For example:

- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"
  with:
    composer-options: "--ignore-platform-reqs --optimize-autoloader"

working-directory

The working-directory input parameter allows you to specify a different location for your composer.json file. For example, if your composer.json is located in packages/acme-foo/, use working-directory to tell ramsey/composer-install where to run things.

- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"
  with:
    working-directory: "packages/acme-foo"

You may use this step as many times as needed, if you have multiple composer.json files.

For example:

# Install dependencies using composer.json in the root.
- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"

# Install dependencies using composer.json in src/Component/Config/
- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"
  with:
    working-directory: "src/Component/Config"

# Install dependencies using composer.json in src/Component/Validator/
- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"
  with:
    working-directory: "src/Component/Validator"

ignore-cache

If you have jobs for which you wish to completely ignore the caching step, you may use the ignore-cache input parameter. When present, ramsey/composer-install will neither read from nor write to the cache.

Values of 'yes', true, or 1 will tell the action to ignore the cache. For any other value, the action will use the default behavior, which is to read from and store to the cache.

- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"
  with:
    ignore-cache: "yes"

custom-cache-key

There may be times you wish to specify your own cache key. You may do so with the custom-cache-key input parameter. When provided, ramsey/composer-install will not use the auto-generated cache key, so if your composer.json or composer.lock files change, you'll need to update the custom cache key if you wish to update the cache.

- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"
  with:
    custom-cache-key: "my-custom-cache-key"

custom-cache-suffix

ramsey/composer-install will auto-generate a cache key which is composed of the following elements:

  • The OS image name, like ubuntu-latest.
  • The exact PHP version, like 8.1.11.
  • The options passed via composer-options.
  • The dependency version setting as per dependency-versions.
  • The working directory as per working-directory.
  • A hash of the composer.json and/or composer.lock files.

If you don't want to generate your own cache key, but do want to make the cache key even more specific, you can specify a suffix to be added to the cache key via the custom-cache-suffix parameter.

# Adds a suffix to the cache key which is equivalent to the full date-time
# of "last Monday 00:00", which means that the cache will be force refreshed
# via the first workflow which is run every Monday.
- uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"
  with:
    custom-cache-suffix: $(/bin/date -u --date='last Mon' "+%F")

⚠️ Note: specifying a custom-cache-key will take precedence over the custom-cache-suffix.

Fork and private repositories

Sometimes it's needed to use the repositories key in your composer.json to pull in forks, PRs with patches or private repositories. In this case, your GitHub Action may start failing with a Could not authenticate against github.com error message. To solve this, you need to add a GitHub Personal Access token, and this bit to your Action configuration:

env:
   COMPOSER_AUTH: '{"github-oauth": {"github.com": "${{ secrets.COMPOSER_AUTH }}"}}'

In this example, COMPOSER_AUTH is the name of the secret that you'll need to create. To access public repositories, the public_repo scope is sufficient, while for private repositories (that you can access), read:project will be needed.

For more information on how to do that on your repository, see Creating a personal access token and Creating encrypted secrets for a repository on GitHub documentation.

Matrix Example

GitHub Workflows allow you to set up a job matrix, which allows you to configure multiple jobs for the same steps by using variable substitution in the job definition.

Here's an example of how you might use the dependency-versions and composer-options input parameters as part of a job matrix.

strategy:
  matrix:
    php:
      - "7.4"
      - "8.0"
      - "8.1"
      - "8.2"
    dependencies:
      - "lowest"
      - "highest"
    include:
      - php-version: "8.3"
        composer-options: "--ignore-platform-reqs"

steps:
  - uses: "actions/checkout@v4"
  - uses: "shivammathur/setup-php@v2"
    with:
      php-version: "${{ matrix.php }}"
  - uses: "ramsey/composer-install@v3"
    with:
      dependency-versions: "${{ matrix.dependencies }}"
      composer-options: "${{ matrix.composer-options }}"

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Before contributing to this project, familiarize yourself with CONTRIBUTING.md.

Copyright and License

The ramsey/composer-install GitHub Action is copyright © Ben Ramsey and licensed for use under the terms of the MIT License (MIT). Please see LICENSE for more information.