When working with revisions of text one sometimes faces the problem that there are several revisions based off the same original text. Rather than choosing one and discarding the other we want to merge the two revisions.
Git does that already wonderfully. In a php application we want a simple tool
that does the same. There is the xdiff PECL extension
which has the xdiff_string_merge3
function. But xdiff_string_merge3
does not behave the same way as git and
xdiff may not be available on your system.
PhpMerge is a small library that solves this problem. There are two classes:
\PhpMerge\PhpMerge
and \PhpMerge\GitMerge
that implement the
\PhpMerge\PhpMergeInterface
which has just a merge
method.
PhpMerge
uses SebastianBergmann\Diff\Differ
to get the differences between
the different versions and calculates the merged text from it.
GitMerge
uses Symplify\GitWrapper\GitWrapper
, writes the text to a temporary file
and uses the command line git to merge the text.
Simple example:
use PhpMerge\PhpMerge;
// Create a merger instance.
$merger = new PhpMerge();
// Get the texts to merge.
$original = <<<'EOD'
unchanged
replaced
unchanged
normal
unchanged
unchanged
removed
EOD;
$version1= <<<'EOD'
added
unchanged
replacement
unchanged
normal
unchanged
unchanged
EOD;
$version2 = <<<'EOD'
unchanged
replaced
unchanged
normal??
unchanged
unchanged
EOD;
$expected = <<<'EOD'
added
unchanged
replacement
unchanged
normal??
unchanged
unchanged
EOD;
$result = $merger->merge($original, $version1, $version2);
// $result === $expected;
With merge conflicts:
// Continuing from before with:
use Phpmerge\MergeException;
use PhpMerge\MergeConflict;
$conflicting = <<<'EOD'
unchanged
replaced
unchanged
normal!!
unchanged
unchanged
EOD;
try {
$merger->merge($original, $version2, $conflicting);
} catch (MergeException $exception) {
/** @var MergeConflict[] $conflicts */
$conflicts = $exception->getConflicts();
$original_lines = $conflicts[0]->getBase();
// $original_lines === ["normal\n"];
$version2_lines = $conflicts[0]->getRemote();
// $version2_lines === ["normal??\n"];
$conflicting_lines = $conflicts[0]->getLocal();
// $conflicting_lines === ["normal!!\n"];
$line_numer_of_conflict = $conflicts[0]->getBaseLine();
// $line_numer_of_conflict === 3; // Count starts with 0.
// It is also possible to get the merged version using the first version
// to resolve conflicts.
$merged = $exception->getMerged();
// $merged === $version2;
// In this case, but in general there could be non-conflicting changes.
$line_in_merged = $conflicts[0]->getMergedLine();
// $line_in_merged === 3; // Count starts with 0.
}
Using the command line git to perform the merge:
use PhpMerge\GitMerge;
$merger = new GitMerge();
// Use as the previous example.
PhpMerge can be installed with Composer by adding the library as a dependency to your composer.json file.
{
"require": {
"bircher/php-merge": "~4.0"
}
}
To use the command line git with GitMerge
:
{
"require": {
"bircher/php-merge": "~4.0",
"symplify/git-wrapper": "^9.1|^10.0"
}
}
Please refer to Composer's documentation for installation and usage instructions.
In the ~4.0 version we switch from cpliakas/git-wrapper
to symplify/git-wrapper
since the former is deprecated.
This update means that there is no change when only using PhpMerge\PhpMerge
.