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Last Updated: 2023-09-14 15:25:47
A PHP code-quality tool
License: MIT License
Languages: PHP, Shell, Makefile, Smarty, Batchfile
Sick and tired of defending code quality over and over again? GrumPHP will do it for you! This composer plugin will register some git hooks in your package repository. When somebody commits changes, GrumPHP will run some tests on the committed code. If the tests fail, you won't be able to commit your changes. This handy tool will not only improve your codebase, it will also teach your co-workers to write better code following the best practices you've determined as a team.
GrumPHP has a set of common tasks built-in. You will be able to use GrumPHP with a minimum of configuration.
We don't want to bore you with all the details, so quick: install it yourself and unleash the power of GrumPHP!
In order for this package to work, you have to make sure following tools are discoverable on the command-line:
This package is a composer plugin and should be installed to your project's dev dependency using composer:
Install GrumPHP as a phar without dependencies:
composer require --dev phpro/grumphp-shim
Install GrumPHP with dependencies:
composer require --dev phpro/grumphp
Install GrumPHP without dependencies and automated git hooks through phive
phive install grumphp
When the package is installed, GrumPHP will attach itself to the git hooks of your project. You will see following message in the composer logs:
Watch out! GrumPHP is sniffing your commits!
GrumPHP will never push you into using a specific task. You can choose the tasks that fit your needs, and activate or
deactivate any task in no time! See the suggest
section in composer.json.
Note: GrumPHP will overwrite existing hooks unless you run composer install
with --no-plugins
or --no-scripts
.
We do create a backup of your git hook, but it's best to make sure you also have a backup of your custom hooks before you try to install GrumPHP.
Having trouble installing GrumPHP? Find out how to:
Some things in GrumPHP can be configured in a grumphp.yml
or grumphp.yml.dist
or grumphp.dist.yml
file in the root of your project (the directory where you run the grumphp command).
You can specify a custom config filename and location in composer.json
or in the --config
option of the console commands.
# grumphp.yml
grumphp:
hooks_dir: ~
hooks_preset: local
git_hook_variables:
VAGRANT_HOST_DIR: .
VAGRANT_PROJECT_DIR: /var/www
EXEC_GRUMPHP_COMMAND: exec
ENV: {}
stop_on_failure: false
ignore_unstaged_changes: false
hide_circumvention_tip: false
process_timeout: 60
ascii:
failed: grumphp-grumpy.txt
succeeded: grumphp-happy.txt
parallel:
enabled: true
max_workers: 32
fixer:
enabled: true
fix_by_default: false
environment:
files: []
variables: {}
paths: []
tasks: {}
testsuites: []
extensions: []
Details of the configuration are broken down into the following sections.
Since GrumPHP is just a CLI tool, these commands can be triggered:
GrumPHP works with PHP 5.6 or above.
This package has been tested with following git clients:
Lots of tasks are already available to make sure your team writes great code. We are always looking to support new tasks. Feel free to log an issue or create a pull request for a task we forgot.
Are you missing a feature or did you find a bug? Log it in the issue tracker! Want to help out? Feel free to contact us!
Bugs and feature request are tracked on GitHub. Please take a look at our rules before contributing your code.
GrumPHP is licensed under the MIT License.