Re: How to port a PHP application that uses Composer?
- In reply to: Mel Pilgrim : "Re: How to port a PHP application that uses Composer?"
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Date: Tue, 17 May 2022 15:07:45 UTC
On 2022-05-16 21:19, Mel Pilgrim wrote: > On 2022-05-16 20:14, Peter Beckman wrote: >> PHP is an interpreted language, Unless there are compiled portions, there >> is no porting necessary. > > There are many reasons to port a PHP application. Bringing in extensions > and > tracking those dependencies, for example. I've also seen a bunch of > applications > that need patches to shell commands because they assume Linuxisms that don't > work > on FreeBSD. > >> How does the "application" run? Is it just a directory that is configured >> as a root directory for a webserver? > > Web and command-line > >> Consider that it is something the installer needs to do, or build the >> package as a deterministic set of packages already installed. > > Yes, that's exactly the point I'm stuck on. The fetch-extract-fetch and > toe-stepping problems mentioned in my original email came from me trying to > solve > this either way: > > "If I ran [composer] as part of the pkg building process, there's a > fetch-extract > race as it needs network access, but also a file extracted from the > distfile. > > If I left it to user config, the autoloader script creation will change a > file > managed by pkg." You may have already solved this. But IMHO you would do well to have a look at the way Python programs use (the) pip (store) to install their needed/desired bits and pieces. Most things that use of Composer use a YAML format file to describe it's needs. Can't you use that to drive your port? HTH l8r, Chris