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How to create a monolithic Composer package with a built-in composer-plugin?

I want my package to ship with a built-in composer-plugin.

I have a structure like this:

composer.json
src/
    ...
plugin/
    composer.json
    src/
        ...

The root composer.json is configured like this:

{
    "name": "foo/bar",
    "type": "library",
    "autoload": {
        "psr-4": {
            "Foo\\Bar\\": "src/"
        }
    },
    "repositories": [
        {
            "type": "path",
            "url": "./tools",
            "options": {
                "symlink": false
            }
        }
    ],
    "require": {
        "foo/bar-plugin": "*"
    }
}

And the built-in composer-plugin's plugin/composer.json like this:

{
    "name": "foo/bar-plugin",
    "type": "composer-plugin",
    "require": {
        "composer-plugin-api": "^1",
        "composer/composer": "^1",
        "foo/bar": "*"
    },
    "autoload": {
        "psr-4": {
            "Foo\\Bar\\Plugin\\": "src/"
        }
    },
    "extra": {
        "class": "Foo\\Bar\\Plugin\\MyComposerPlugin"
    }
}

Notice how there's a two-way dependency here - the plugin depends on foo/bar , and the project itself depends on foo/bar-plugin .

Here's where it gets weird. During a fresh installation with eg composer install or composer update , everything is fine - the plugin does it's thing, which, right now, means just announcing itself on the console.

Now, after installation, if I type just composer , I'd expect to see the plugin announce itself, same as before, right?

Instead, it generates a fatal "class not found error", as soon as it tries to reference any class belonging to the foo/bar package.

It's as though composer lost track of the fact that foo/bar-plugin requires foo/bar , and for some reason it's classes aren't auto-loadable.

Is there any reason this shouldn't be possible? Why not?

Of course I can just package this stuff in separate external package, but that isn't going to make much sense, since these packages are just going to depend on each other - they're effectively one unit, a packaging them as two packages is going to result in a mess of major version increases with every small change, as basically every release of foo/bar will break foo/bar-plugin .

Ideally, I'd like to simply add the composer-plugin directly into the main package, but it appears that's not possible for some reason? Only a package with type composer-plugin is allowed to add plug-ins, it seems?

If the plugin is essentially a part of your package, you should not use it as such. Composer offers alternatives.

As Jens mentioned in a comment to your question, there is 'scripts' key in composer.json . You can invoke shell commands inside, but also call static class methods.

About plugin solution - composer explicitly mentions this on its site:

Composer makes no assumptions about the state of your dependencies prior to install or update. Therefore, you should not specify scripts that require Composer-managed dependencies in the pre-update-cmd or pre-install-cmd event hooks . If you need to execute scripts prior to install or update please make sure they are self-contained within your root package.

(my side note - this also roughly applies to plugins).

Anyway - to provide you with a solution: discard 'plugin' approach. Instead modify your composer.json file so it looks as follows:

composer.json

{
    "name": "foo/bar",
    "type": "library",
    "autoload": {
        "psr-4": {
            "Foo\\Bar\\": "src/"
        }
    },
    "require": {
    },

    "scripts": {
        "post-install-cmd": [
            "Foo\\Bar\\Composer\\Plugin::postInstall"
        ],
        "post-update-cmd": [
            "Foo\\Bar\\Composer\\Plugin::postUpdate"
        ]        
    }

}

Additionally, in src/Composer folder create Plugin.php :

src/Composer/Plugin.php

<?php

namespace Foo\Bar\Composer;

use Foo\Bar\Test;

/**
 * Composer scripts.
 */
class Plugin
{
    public static function postInstall()
    {
        print_r("POST INSTALL\n");
        print_r(Test::TEST_CONST);
        print_r("\n");
    }

    public static function postUpdate()
    {
        print_r("POST UPDATE\n");
        print_r(Test::TEST_CONST);
        print_r("\n");
    }
}

As you see, it prints constant from Test class. Create it in src/ :

src/Test.php

<?php

namespace Foo\Bar;

/**
 * Test class.
 */
class Test
{
    const TEST_CONST = "HERE I AM";
}

Run this and check, how it plays out.

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