How to Install and Use Composer on Debian

Composer is a popular dependency management tool for PHP, created mainly to facilitate installation and updates for project dependencies. Composer works by checking which other packages a specific project depends on, and then installs them for you using the appropriate versions according to the project requirements. Composer is also commonly used to bootstrap new projects based on popular PHP frameworks such as Symfony and Laravel.

In this guide, you will install and use Composer on a Debian 11 server.

Prerequisites

To follow this tutorial, you will need one Debian 11 server set up, including a non-root sudo-enabled user and firewall enabled. You can do this by following our Debian initial server setup guide.

Step 1 — Installing the Dependencies

In addition to dependencies that may already be included within your Debian 11 system, Composer requires php-cli to execute PHP scripts in the command line, and unzip to extract zipped archives.

Begin by updating the package manager cache:

  1. sudo apt update

 

Next, install the dependencies. You will need curl to download Composer and php-cli for installing and running it. The php-mbstring package is necessary to provide functions for a library you’ll be using in this tutorial. git is used by Composer for downloading project dependencies, and unzip is for extracting zipped packages. Everything can be installed with the following command:

  1. sudo apt install curl php-cli php-mbstring git unzip

 

With all the dependencies installed, now you can install Composer.

Step 2 — Downloading and Installing Composer

Composer provides an installer written in PHP. You will download it, verify that it’s not corrupted, and then use it to install Composer.

First, make sure you’re in your home directory:

  1. cd ~

 

Then, retrieve the installer using curl:

  1. curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer -o composer-setup.php

 

Next, verify that the installer matches the SHA-384 hash for the latest installer found on the Composer Public Keys / Signatures page. To facilitate the verification step, you can use the following command to programmatically obtain the latest hash from the composer page and store it in a shell variable:

  1. HASH=`curl -sS https://composer.github.io/installer.sig`

 

To output the obtained value, run:

  1. echo $HASH

 
Output
55ce33d7678c5a611085589f1f3ddf8b3c52d662cd01d4ba75c0ee0459970c2200a51f492d557530c71c15d8dba01eae

Now execute the following PHP code, as provided in the Composer download page, to verify that the installation script is safe to run:

  1. php -r "if (hash_file('SHA384', 'composer-setup.php') === '$HASH') { echo 'Installer verified'; } else { echo 'Installer corrupt'; unlink('composer-setup.php'); } echo PHP_EOL;"

 

Your output will be the following:

Output
Installer verified

If you receive a message that says Installer corrupt, you need to download the installation script again and verify that you’re using the correct hash. Then run the command to verify the installer again. Once you have a verified installer, you can continue.

To install composer globally, use the following command to download and install Composer as a system-wide command named composer under /usr/local/bin:

  1. sudo php composer-setup.php --install-dir=/usr/local/bin --filename=composer

 

Your output will be the following:

Output
All settings correct for using Composer
Downloading...

Composer (version 2.3.10) successfully installed to: /usr/local/bin/composer
Use it: php /usr/local/bin/composer

Test your installation by running this command:

  1. composer

 

Your output will then display Composer’s version and arguments, similar to the following:

Output
  ______
  / ____/___  ____ ___  ____  ____  ________  _____
 / /   / __ \/ __ `__ \/ __ \/ __ \/ ___/ _ \/ ___/
/ /___/ /_/ / / / / / / /_/ / /_/ (__  )  __/ /
\____/\____/_/ /_/ /_/ .___/\____/____/\___/_/
                    /_/
Composer version 2.3.10 2022-07-13 15:48:23

Usage:
  command [options] [arguments]

Options:
  -h, --help                     Display help for the given command. When no command is given display help for the list command
  -q, --quiet                    Do not output any message
  -V, --version                  Display this application version
      --ansi|--no-ansi           Force (or disable --no-ansi) ANSI output
  -n, --no-interaction           Do not ask any interactive question
      --profile                  Display timing and memory usage information
      --no-plugins               Whether to disable plugins.
      --no-scripts               Skips the execution of all scripts defined in composer.json file.
  -d, --working-dir=WORKING-DIR  If specified, use the given directory as working directory.
      --no-cache                 Prevent use of the cache
  -v|vv|vvv, --verbose           Increase the verbosity of messages: 1 for normal output, 2 for more verbose output and 3 for debug
. . .

This verifies that Composer was installed successfully on your system and is available system-wide.

Note: If you prefer to have separate Composer executables for each project you host on this server, you can install it locally, on a per-project basis. Users of NPM will be familiar with this approach. This method is also useful when your system user doesn’t have permission to install software system-wide.

To do this, use the command php composer-setup.php. This will generate a composer.phar file in your current directory, which can be executed with ./composer.phar command.

Now that you’ve installed Composer, in the next step you will learn how to use Composer to manage PHP dependencies.

Step 3 — Using Composer in a PHP Project

PHP projects often depend on external libraries, and managing those dependencies and their versions can be tricky. Composer solves that issue by tracking your dependencies and making it more accessible for others to install them.

In order to use Composer in your project, you’ll need a composer.json file. The composer.json file tells Composer the dependencies it needs to download for your project, and the versions of each package that are allowed to be installed. This is extremely important to keep your project consistent and avoid installing unstable versions that could potentially cause backward compatibility issues.

You don’t need to create this file manually, because doing so is error prone and may cause syntax errors. Composer auto-generates the composer.json file when you add a dependency to your project using the composer require command. You can add additional dependencies in the same way, without the need to manually edit this file.

The process of using Composer to install a package as a dependency in a project involves the following steps:

  • Identify what kind of library the application needs.
  • Research a suitable open-source library on Packagist.org, the official package repository for Composer.
  • Choose the package you want to depend on.
  • Run composer require to include the dependency in the composer.json file and install the package.

You can test this out with a demo application.

The goal of this application is to transform a given sentence into a URL-friendly string called a slug. A slug is commonly used to convert page titles to URL paths, such as the final portion of the URL for this tutorial.

Start by navigating to your home directory:

  1. cd ~

 

Then create a directory. Call it slugify:

  1. mkdir slugify

 

After you’re done creating it, change into the directory:

  1. cd slugify

 

Now it’s time to search Packagist.org for a package that can help generate slugs. If you search for the term “slug” on Packagist, you’ll get a result similar to the following:

Packagist Search

There will be two numbers on the right side of each package in the list. The number next to the icon with the arrow pointing down represents how many times the package was installed, and the number with the star icon represents how many times a package was starred on GitHub. You can also reorder the search results based on these numbers. Generally speaking, packages with more installations and more stars tend to be more stable, since so many people are using them. It’s also important to check the package description for relevance to make sure it’s what you need.

For this tutorial, you need a string-to-slug converter. From the search results, the package cocur/slugify is a good match, with a reasonable amount of installations and stars.

Packages on Packagist have a vendor name and a package name. Each package has a unique identifier (a namespace) in the same format GitHub uses for its repositories, in the form vendor/package. The library you want to install uses the namespace cocur/slugify. You need the namespace in order to require the package in your project.

Now that you know the package you want to install, run composer require to include it as a dependency and also generate the composer.json file for the project:

  1. composer require cocur/slugify

 

Your output will return the following as Composer downloads the dependency:

Output
Using version ^4.1 for cocur/slugify
./composer.json has been created
Running composer update cocur/slugify
Loading composer repositories with package information
Updating dependencies
Lock file operations: 1 install, 0 updates, 0 removals
  - Locking cocur/slugify (v4.1.0)
Writing lock file
Installing dependencies from lock file (including require-dev)
Package operations: 1 install, 0 updates, 0 removals
  - Downloading cocur/slugify (v4.1.0)
  - Installing cocur/slugify (v4.1.0): Extracting archive
Generating autoload files

As this output indicates, Composer automatically decides the version of the package to use. If you check your project’s directory now, it will contain two new files: composer.json and composer.lock, and a vendor directory:

  1. ls -l

 
Output
total 12
-rw-r--r-- 1 sammy sammy   59 Aug  2 22:19 composer.json
-rw-r--r-- 1 sammy sammy 3462 Aug  2 22:19 composer.lock
drwxr-xr-x 4 sammy sammy 4096 Aug  2 22:19 vendor

The composer.lock file is used to store information about the versions of each installed package. It also ensures the same versions are used if someone else clones your project and installs its dependencies. The vendor directory is where the project dependencies are located. The vendor folder doesn’t need to be committed into version control, you only need to include the composer.json and composer.lock files.

When installing a project that already contains a composer.json file, run composer install in order to download the project’s dependencies.

Next, review the version constraints. If you check the contents of your composer.json file, you’ll have something like the following:

  1. cat composer.json

 
Output
{
    "require": {
        "cocur/slugify": "^4.1"
    }
}
 

You might notice the special character ^ before the version number in composer.json. Composer supports several different constraints and formats for defining the required package version, in order to provide flexibility while also keeping your project stable. The caret (^) operator used by the auto-generated composer.json file is the recommended operator for maximum interoperability, following semantic versioning. In this case, it defines 4.1 as the minimum compatible version and allows updates to any future version under 5.0.

Generally speaking, you won’t need to tamper with version constraints in your composer.json file. However, some situations might require that you manually edit the constraint. For instance, when a major new version of your required library is released, and you want to upgrade, or when the library you want to use doesn’t follow semantic versioning.

Here are some examples to give you a better understanding of how Composer version constraints work:

Constraint Meaning Example Versions Allowed
^1.0 >= 1.0 < 2.0 1.0, 1.2.3, 1.9.9
^1.1.0 >= 1.1.0 < 2.0 1.1.0, 1.5.6, 1.9.9
~1.0 >= 1.0 < 2.0.0 1.0, 1.4.1, 1.9.9
~1.0.0 >= 1.0.0 < 1.1 1.0.0, 1.0.4, 1.0.9
1.2.1 1.2.1 1.2.1
1.* >= 1.0 < 2.0 1.0.0, 1.4.5, 1.9.9
1.2.* >= 1.2 < 1.3 1.2.0, 1.2.3, 1.2.9

Next, you will learn how to load dependencies automatically with Composer.

Step 4 — Including the Autoload Script

Since PHP itself doesn’t automatically load classes, Composer provides an autoload script that you can include in your project to get autoloading to work. This helps when working with your dependencies.

The only thing you need to do is include the vendor/autoload.php file in your PHP scripts before any class instantiation. This file is automatically generated by Composer when you add your first dependency.

You can test it out in your application. Create the file test.php and open it in your preferred text editor. Here, nano is used:

  1. nano test.php

 

Add the following code to bring in the vendor/autoload.php file, load the cocur/slugify dependency, and create a slug:

test.php
<?php
require __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php'; 
use Cocur\Slugify\Slugify;

$slugify = new Slugify();

echo $slugify->slugify('Hello World, this is a long sentence and I need to make a slug from it!');
 

Save the file and exit your editor. If you’re using nano, you can do this by pressing CTRL + X, then Y and ENTER.

Now run the script:

  1. php test.php

 

This produces the following output:

Output
hello-world-this-is-a-long-sentence-and-i-need-to-make-a-slug-from-it

Dependencies need updates when new versions come out, so you will learn how to handle that in the last step.

Step 5 — Updating Project Dependencies

Whenever you want to update your project dependencies to more recent versions, run the update command:

  1. composer update

 

This will check for newer versions of the libraries you added as requirements in your project. If a newer version is found and it’s compatible with the version constraint defined in the composer.json file, Composer will replace the previous version installed. The composer.lock file will be updated to reflect these changes.

You can also update one or more specific libraries by specifying them like the following:

  1. composer update vendor/package vendor2/package2

 

Be sure to commit the changes to your composer.json and composer.lock files after you update your dependencies, so whoever is working in the project has access to the same package versions.

Conclusion

Composer is a powerful tool every PHP developer should have in their utility belt. In this tutorial, you installed Composer on Debian 11 and used it in a project. You now know how to install and update dependencies.

Beyond providing a reliable way for managing project dependencies, Composer also establishes a new standard for sharing and discovering PHP packages created by the community.

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