This module installs Composer, a dependency manager for PHP.
Using the Puppet Module Tool, install the
willdurand/composer
by
running the following command:
puppet module install willdurand/composer
Otherwise, clone this repository and make sure to install the proper
dependencies (puppetlabs-stdlib
, puppetlabs-cron_core
):
git clone git://github.com/willdurand/puppet-composer.git modules/composer
The puppet-wget
module is required until version 1.1.x
, but dropped in version 1.2.x
.
For further notes about this module, please have a look at the 1.1
docs.
In 1.2
the puppetlabs-stdlib
dependency has been added in order to
gain lots of puppet features located in this module and improve the type
validation in the manifests.
In order to avoid messing up your global gem
installation and installing the ruby dependencies during the dev phase,
it's possible to install the dependencies in a local path which is ignored by .gitignore
by default:
bundle install --path vendor/bundle
Include the composer
class:
include composer
You can specify the command name you want to get, and the target directory (aka where to install Composer):
class { '::composer':
command_name => 'composer',
target_dir => '/usr/local/bin'
}
You can also auto update composer by using the auto_update
parameter. This will
update Composer only when you will run Puppet.
class { '::composer':
auto_update => true
}
You can specify a particular user
that will be the owner of the Composer
executable:
class { '::composer':
user => 'foo',
}
As the user is configurable, the group is changeable, too:
class { '::composer':
group => 'owner_group_name',
}
It is also possible to specify a custom composer version:
class { '::composer':
version => '1.0.0-alpha11',
}
When having an infrastructure with slower connections, it is possible to increase the timeout in order to avoid running into errors because of a slow connection:
class { '::composer':
download_timeout => '100',
}
As described in #44 in several cases it's possible that the catalogue crashes because of duplicate package declarations.
In order to skip the installation of wget
from this module, you can use the build_deps
argument:
class { '::composer':
build_deps => false,
}
One feature of composer are global configuration parameters.
There are some important parameters like oauth_token
for the GitHub API that should be configured through composer.
::composer::config { 'composer-vagrant-config':
ensure => present,
user => 'vagrant',
configs => {
'github-oauth' => {
'github.com' => 'token'
},
'process-timeout' => 500,
'http-basic' => {
'github.com' => ['username', 'password']
},
},
}
And removing single params is also possible:
::composer::config { 'remove-platform':
ensure => absent,
configs => ['process-timeout', 'github-oauth.github.com', 'http-basic.github.com'],
user => 'vagrant',
}
Note that the config items must be structured like when using the CLI. This means that when having a gitlab-oauth
entry for site gitlab.org
then the following key should be removed:
gitlab-oauth.gitlab.org
Furthermore it is possible to configure the home_dir
parameter as some users might use another one:
::composer::config { 'composer-vagrant-config':
ensure => present,
user => 'vagrant',
home_dir => '/custom/home/dir',
}
The composer dependency resolver is quite complex and there are issues where the cache hides actual conflicts that make reproduction of such issues a lot harder. In order to keep the cache clean, it is possible to clear the cache via puppet:
::composer::clear_cache { 'clear-cache-for-user':
exec_user => 'user',
}
As the home directory is configurable, it is possible to adjust the homedir to this resource:
::composer::clear_cache { 'clear-cache-for-user':
home_dir => '/custom/home/dir',
exec_user => 'user',
}
Since this module does only handler the composer
installation, but doesn't care about the php
setup, you might run
into errors due to a missing php instance.
This can be fixed by using the require
parameter:
class { '::composer':
require => Package['php5'],
}
This will puppet tell to wait with the composer install process until the php package is installed.
Install the dependencies using Bundler:
bundle install
Run the following command:
bundle exec rake spec
If you're using nix
as dependency manager, you can create a custom shell which contains all dependencies declared in Gemfile.lock
by running nix-shell
in the root directory.
puppet-composer is released under the MIT License. See the bundled LICENSE file for details.