Describe stability flags more consistently

main
jonathan bensaid 11 years ago
parent 3942651014
commit 6aefe6d8ad

@ -263,7 +263,7 @@ All links are optional fields.
These allow you to further restrict or expand the stability of a package beyond
the scope of the [minimum-stability](#minimum-stability) setting. You can apply
them to a constraint, or just apply them to an empty constraint if you want to
allow unstable packages of a dependency's dependency for example.
allow unstable packages of a dependency for example.
Example:
@ -274,6 +274,18 @@ Example:
}
}
If one of your dependencies has a dependency on an unstable package you need to
explicitly require it as well, along with its sufficient stability flag.
Example:
{
"require": {
"doctrine/doctrine-fixtures-bundle": "dev-master",
"doctrine/data-fixtures": "@dev"
}
}
`require` and `require-dev` additionally support explicit references (i.e.
commit) for dev versions to make sure they are locked to a given state, even
when you run update. These only work if you explicitly require a dev version

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