This package provides you with a simple tool to set up a new package and it will let you focus on the development of the package instead of the boilerplate. If you like a visual explanation check out this video by Jeffrey Way on Laracasts.
Via Composer
$ composer require jeroen-g/laravel-packager --dev
If you do not run Laravel 5.5 (or higher), then add the service provider in config/app.php
:
JeroenG\Packager\PackagerServiceProvider::class,
If you do run the package on Laravel 5.5+, package auto-discovery takes care of the magic of adding the service provider.
Be aware that the auto-discovery also means that this package is loaded in your production environment. Therefore you may disable auto-discovery and instead put in your AppServiceProvider
something like this:
if ($this->app->environment('local')) {
$this->app->register('JeroenG\Packager\PackagerServiceProvider');
}
Optional you can publish the configuration to provide a different service provider stub. The default is here.
$ php artisan vendor:publish --provider="JeroenG\Packager\PackagerServiceProvider"
Command:
$ php artisan packager:new MyVendor MyPackage
Result: The command will handle practically everything for you. It will create a packages directory, creates the vendor and package directory in it, pulls in a skeleton package, sets up composer.json and creates a service provider.
Options:
$ php artisan packager:new MyVendor MyPackage --i
$ php artisan packager:new --i
The package will be created interactively, allowing to configure everything in the package's composer.json
, such as the license and package description.
$ php artisan packager:new MyVendor/MyPackage
Alternatively you may also define your vendor and name with a forward slash instead of a space.
Remarks: The new package will be based on this custom skeleton. If you want to use a different package skeleton, you can either:
- (A) publish the configuration file and change the default skeleton that will be used by all
packager:new
calls. - (B) use the flag
--skeleton="http://github.com/path/to/archive/master.zip"
with your own skeleton to use the given skeleton for this one run instead of the one in the configuration.
Command:
$ php artisan packager:get https://github.com/author/repository
$ php artisan packager:git https://github.com/author/repository
Result:
This will register the package in the app's composer.json
file.
If the packager:git
command is used, the entire Git repository is cloned. If packager:get
is used, the package will be downloaded, without a repository. This also works with Bitbucket repositories, but you have to provide the flag --host=bitbucket
for the packager:get
command.
Options:
$ php artisan packager:get https://github.com/author/repository --branch=develop
$ php artisan packager:get https://github.com/author/repository MyVendor MyPackage
$ php artisan packager:git https://github.com/author/repository MyVendor MyPackage
It is possible to specify a branch with the --branch
option. If you specify a vendor and name directly after the url, those will be used instead of the pieces of the url.
Command:
$ php artisan packager:tests
Result:
Packager will go through all maintaining packages (in packages/
) and publish their tests to tests/packages
.
Add the following to phpunit.xml (under the other testsuites) in order to run the tests from the packages:
<testsuite name="Packages">
<directory suffix="Test.php">./tests/packages</directory>
</testsuite>
Options:
$ php artisan packager:tests MyVendor MyPackage
Remarks: If a tests folder exists, the files will be copied to a dedicated folder in the Laravel App tests folder. This allows you to use all of Laravel's own testing functions without any hassle.
Command:
$ php artisan packager:list
Result:
An overview of all packages in the /packages
directory.
Options:
$ php artisan packager:list --git
The packages are displayed with information on the git status (branch, commit difference with origin) if it is a git repository.
Command:
$ php artisan packager:remove MyVendor MyPackage
Result:
The MyVendor\MyPackage
package is deleted, including its references in composer.json
and config/app.php
.
Command:
$ php artisan packager:publish MyVendor MyPackage https://github.com/myvendor/mypackage
Result:
The MyVendor\MyPackage
package will be published to Github using the provided url.
Command:
$ php artisan packager:check MyVendor MyPackage
Result:
The MyVendor\MyPackage
package will be checked for security vulnerabilities using SensioLabs security checker.
Remarks You first need to run
$ composer require sensiolabs/security-checker
It turns out that, especially on Windows, there might arise some problems with the downloading of the skeleton, due to a file regarding SSL certificates missing on the OS. This can be solved by opening up your .env file and putting this in it:
CURL_VERIFY=false
Of course this means it will be less secure, but then again you are not supposed to run this package anywhere near a production environment.
If you are having problems with timeouts when creating new packages, you can now change the config variable timeout in config/packager.php to fix this.
Please see changelog.md for what has changed recently.
Please see contributing.md for details and a todolist.
The EU Public License. Please see license.md for more information.