How to force composer to reinstall a library?

2020-05-14 04:27发布

问题:

I'm using the ZF2 skeleton app and it has a .gitignore that prevents external libraries from being commited to git. While debugging I like to go and change stuff here and there in the libraries' source to learn how things work. If these were version controlled it would be very easy to revert them back to their original state.

How can I force Composer to reinstall a particular framework so that I can get a fresh -unmodified- copy again?

PS: Please don't suggest removing the .gitignore file since it's there for a reason; it prevents my third party libraries from getting into my app's repository. I can always install them during an automated deployment.

回答1:

You can use the --prefer-source flag for composer to checkout external packages with the VCS information (if any available). You can simply revert to the original state. Also if you issue the composer update command composer will detect any changes you made locally and ask if you want to discard them.

Your .gitignore file is related to your root project (ZF2 skeleton) and it prevents the vendor dir (where your third party libs are) from committing to your own VCS. The ignore file is unrelated to the git repo's of your vendors.



回答2:

Just clear your vendors folder

rm -rf vendor/*


回答3:

I didn't want to delete all the packages in vendor/ directory, so here is how I did it:

  1. rm -rf vendor/package-i-messed-up
  2. composer install again


回答4:

What I did:

  1. Deleted that particular library's folder
  2. composer update --prefer-source vendor/library-name

It fetches the library again along with it's git repo



回答5:

Reinstall the dependencies. Remove the vendor folder (manually) or via rm command (if you are in the project folder, sure) on Linux before:

rm -rf vendor/

composer update -v

https://www.dev-metal.com/composer-problems-try-full-reset/



回答6:

As user @aaracrr pointed out in a comment on another answer probably the best answer is to re-require the package with the same version constraint.

ie.

composer require vendor/package

or specifying a version constraint

composer require vendor/package:^1.0.0