Composer & Cygwin

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醉酒成梦
醉酒成梦 2021-01-30 04:22

Composer doesn\'t run correctly in Cygwin if you try to install it \"globally\".

Putting composer.phar into /usr/local/bin/composer, then trying to run it will result in

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  •  不知归路
    2021-01-30 04:52

    Just tripped over the same problem and found a solution. Posting it here, just in case I'll ever have to look it up again.

    1. Set up a bin directory right under /home/my-username:

      cd ~
      mkdir bin
      
    2. Move the composer.phar (or any other of those nifty new PHP imps that are on the rise) into the ~/bindirectory and make sure to set it's execution bit:

      # Notice how I got rid of the superfluous `.phar` extension
      mv /path/to/composer.phar ~/bin/composer
      chmod +x ~/bin/composer
      
    3. Tell cygwin to include your ~/bin directory in the search path:

      Open up the file ~/.bash_profile and uncomment the following paragraph ...

      # Set PATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists
      if [ -d "${HOME}/bin" ] ; then
        PATH="${HOME}/bin:${PATH}"
      fi
      
    4. Now, for the most important part:

      A wrapper script that helps Win's native PHP resolve Unix style paths (which is causing the problem after all as Windows doesn't know how to handle /cygdrive/... paths).

      cd ~/bin
      touch php
      chmod +x php
      

      After editing the wrapper script ~/bin/php should read:

      #!/bin/bash
      
      # e.g. php="/cygdrive/c/Program Files (x86)/php/php.exe"
      php="/path/to/php.exe"
      
      for ((n=1; n <= $#; n++)); do
          if [ -e "${!n}" ]; then
              # Converts Unix style paths to Windows equivalents
              path="$(cygpath --mixed ${!n} | xargs)"
      
              case 1 in
                  $(( n == 1 )) )
                      set -- "$path" "${@:$(($n+1))}";;
                  $(( n < $# )) )
                      set -- "${@:1:$((n-1))}" "$path" ${@:$((n+1)):$#};;
                  *)
                      set -- "${@:1:$(($#-1))}" "$path";;
              esac
          fi
      done
      
      "$php" "$@"
      
    5. Now restart your shell and it should correctly invoke the PHP interpreter whenever it stumbles upon a #!/usr/bin/env php shebang. Simply issue a:

      composer --help
      

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