# Setting up and using custom installers ## Synopsis At times, it may be necessary for a package to require additional actions during installation, such as installing packages outside of the default `vendor` library. In these cases you could consider creating a Custom Installer to handle your specific logic. ## Calling a Custom Installer Suppose that your project already has a Custom Installer for specific modules then invoking that installer is a matter of defining the correct [type][1] in your package file. > _See the next chapter for an instruction how to create Custom Installers._ Every Custom Installer defines which [type][1] string it will recognize. Once recognized it will completely override the default installer and only apply its own logic. An example use-case would be: > phpDocumentor features Templates that need to be installed outside of the > default /vendor folder structure. As such they have chosen to adopt the > `phpdocumentor-template` [type][1] and create a plugin providing the Custom > Installer to send these templates to the correct folder. An example composer.json of such a template package would be: ```json { "name": "phpdocumentor/template-responsive", "type": "phpdocumentor-template", "require": { "phpdocumentor/template-installer-plugin": "*" } } ``` > **IMPORTANT**: to make sure that the template installer is present at the > time the template package is installed, template packages should require > the plugin package. ## Creating an Installer A Custom Installer is defined as a class that implements the [`Composer\Installer\InstallerInterface`][4] and is usually distributed in a Composer Plugin. A basic Installer Plugin would thus compose of three files: 1. the package file: composer.json 2. The Plugin class, e.g.: `My\Project\Composer\Plugin.php`, containing a class that implements `Composer\Plugin\PluginInterface`. 3. The Installer class, e.g.: `My\Project\Composer\Installer.php`, containing a class that implements `Composer\Installer\InstallerInterface`. ### composer.json The package file is the same as any other package file but with the following requirements: 1. the [type][1] attribute must be `composer-plugin`. 2. the [extra][2] attribute must contain an element `class` defining the class name of the plugin (including namespace). If a package contains multiple plugins this can be array of class names. Example: ```json { "name": "phpdocumentor/template-installer-plugin", "type": "composer-plugin", "license": "MIT", "autoload": { "psr-0": {"phpDocumentor\\Composer": "src/"} }, "extra": { "class": "phpDocumentor\\Composer\\TemplateInstallerPlugin" }, "require": { "composer-plugin-api": "^1.0" }, "require-dev": { "composer/composer": "^1.3" } } ``` The example above has Composer itself in its require-dev, which allows you to use the Composer classes in your test suite for example. ### The Plugin class The class defining the Composer plugin must implement the [`Composer\Plugin\PluginInterface`][3]. It can then register the Custom Installer in its `activate()` method. The class may be placed in any location and have any name, as long as it is autoloadable and matches the `extra.class` element in the package definition. Example: ```php getInstallationManager()->addInstaller($installer); } } ``` ### The Custom Installer class The class that executes the custom installation should implement the [`Composer\Installer\InstallerInterface`][4] (or extend another installer that implements that interface). It defines the [type][1] string as it will be recognized by packages that will use this installer in the `supports()` method. > **NOTE**: _choose your [type][1] name carefully, it is recommended to follow > the format: `vendor-type`_. For example: `phpdocumentor-template`. The InstallerInterface class defines the following methods (please see the source for the exact signature): * **supports()**, here you test whether the passed [type][1] matches the name that you declared for this installer (see the example). * **isInstalled()**, determines whether a supported package is installed or not. * **install()**, here you can determine the actions that need to be executed upon installation. * **update()**, here you define the behavior that is required when Composer is invoked with the update argument. * **uninstall()**, here you can determine the actions that need to be executed when the package needs to be removed. * **getInstallPath()**, this method should return the location where the package is to be installed, _relative from the location of composer.json._ The path _must not end with a slash._ Example: ```php getPrettyName(), 0, 23); if ('phpdocumentor/template-' !== $prefix) { throw new \InvalidArgumentException( 'Unable to install template, phpdocumentor templates ' .'should always start their package name with ' .'"phpdocumentor/template-"' ); } return 'data/templates/'.substr($package->getPrettyName(), 23); } /** * {@inheritDoc} */ public function supports($packageType) { return 'phpdocumentor-template' === $packageType; } } ``` The example demonstrates that it is possible to extend the [`Composer\Installer\LibraryInstaller`][5] class to strip a prefix (`phpdocumentor/template-`) and use the remaining part to assemble a completely different installation path. > _Instead of being installed in `/vendor` any package installed using this > Installer will be put in the `/data/templates/` folder._ [1]: ../04-schema.md#type [2]: ../04-schema.md#extra [3]: https://github.com/composer/composer/blob/master/src/Composer/Plugin/PluginInterface.php [4]: https://github.com/composer/composer/blob/master/src/Composer/Installer/InstallerInterface.php [5]: https://github.com/composer/composer/blob/master/src/Composer/Installer/LibraryInstaller.php