I installed PHPUnit with composer. Everytime I run it, I have to call vendor/bin/phpunit. How can I put vendor/bin into path, so that next time I only need to call phpunit to run it?
You could add the current directory into your path.
For Linux/Mac add the following into your .bash_profile, Windows would be similar, alter the line below and add it into your PATH.
# include the current `vendor/bin` folder (Notice the `.` - This means current directory)
PATH="./vendor/bin:$PATH"
Remember to restart your terminal or resource your bash_profile.
Now you should be able to run: phpunit and it will automatically look for it within ./vendor/bin and if it exists it will execute using that.
If you are running on Homestead (or some other Linux/Ubuntu system):
alias p='vendor/bin/phpunit'
Then you can just type p and it will run your tests
If you are using Homestead - you can add this alias to your aliases file so it is always there.
Another easy solution, from the composer documentation, is to set your bin-dir setting to ./. This will install the binary in your root directory.
"config": {
"bin-dir": "./"
}
Then you can just run ./phpunit. I typically set bin-dir to bin, then type bin/phpunit. It's short enough for me.
If you already have phpunit installed, you will need to delete the vendor/phpunit directory and rerun composer install before composer will move the binary.
Related
I am tryin to run composer install on my Laravel project. I use docker/Ubuntu to run my application. And every time I try to run composer I get this error(See error below)
CMD.EXE was started with the above path as the current directory. UNC
paths are not supported. Defaulting to Windows directory. Composer
could not find a composer.json file in C:\Windows To initialize a
project, please create a composer.json file. See
https://getcomposer.org/basic-usage
I think this error comes because in the path directory there is a $. (\wsl$\Ubuntu\home).
Don't know if there is a way to change the path or a work around for this error.
Hope this is anof information.
I have installed GO, setup the paths but when i run a file i get this error:
error!! exec: "sqlboiler": executable file not found in $PATH
exec: "sqlboiler": executable file not found in $PATH
exec: "sqlboiler": executable file not found in $PATH
exit status 3
What is going wrong?
The installation instructions are good, https://go.dev/doc/install. However, for me un Ubuntu 20.4 in wsl2, the suggested path for the binaries wasn't enough. Only go and gofmt are added to /usr/local/go/bin.
I did add the below to my .bashrc, since go install puts the binaries in this location on my system.
export PATH="$HOME/go/bin:$PATH"
Note, that the path to the binaries may differ on your system, so you have to adjust it accordingly.
Any binary you install with go install that is added to this path will be available to your shell afterwards.
For example:
$ go install github.com/volatiletech/sqlboiler/v4#latest
$ go install github.com/volatiletech/sqlboiler/v4/drivers/sqlboiler-psql#latest
$ whereis sqlboiler
sqlboiler: /home/blue/go/bin/sqlboiler
Potentially, you also need some database packages to your system. I am not sure on this any more. For example, you could add some Postgres libs if you are using Postgres. You have to see if it works without.
apt-get install postgresql-client-common postgresql-client-12
How to properly install GO with paths and all?
Install Go with the installer (Windows) or archive (extract into /usr/local on Linux/Mac).
When installing from archive, manually add the directory path where the go binary is located (/usr/local/go) to PATH.
Set GOPATH to a directory path wherein to contain bin, pkg and src sub-directories.
Add ${GOPATH}/bin to PATH.
What is going wrong?
The program you are running is trying to run the executable sqlboiler, which cannot be found in any of the directories specified in PATH.
RVM supports .ruby-version and .ruby-gemset on a per project basis and ensures those are set correctly when you navigate to a directory containing those files.
Is there a similar construct I can use for adding directories to my environment PATH variable using RVM?
I haven't found a way to do this using RVM, but I came across another project called direnv that accomplishes exactly what I want.
Here are the steps I took to prepend ./bin to my environment PATH variable on OSX every time I go to my project directory in the shell:
brew install direnv
Add eval "$(direnv hook $0)" to the end of my .zshrc file.
Create a .envrc file in the root of my project with the following content:
PATH_add bin
Just wondering where I should install Composer. It kind of wrecked my environment last time. I'm running XAMPP and i'm looking to use it within some Framework sites. So to me the XAMPP folder itself seems appropriate. Would that be correct? The main thing for me is that it doesn't alter any environment paths or the such.
Any advice would be great.
The main aspect is that you'd probably want to run Composer easily in the command shell. This implies that Composer has to be in any directory mentioned in the path variable.
Have a look at your current path, pick a convenient directory, and put the composer.phar file there.
If you don't like that, you could also create a batch file that does run PHP with that phar file in a different location, and passes all the other command line arguments to it.
This is the third time I'm installing zend studio and zend server now these two are installed succesfully (after half a day). But when I'm trying to create a new project I always get this zf error...
`
*************** ZF ERROR ****************
In order to run the zf command, you need to ensure that Zend Framework
is inside your include_path. There are a variety of ways that you can
ensure that this zf command line tool knows where the Zend Framework
library is on your system, but not all of them can be described here.
The easiest way to get the zf command running is to give it the include
path via an environment variable ZEND_TOOL_INCLUDE_PATH or
ZEND_TOOL_INCLUDE_PATH_PREPEND with the proper include path to use,
then run the command "zf --setup". This command is designed to create
a storage location for your user, as well as create the zf.ini file
that the zf command will consult in order to run properly on your
system.
Example you would run:
$ ZEND_TOOL_INCLUDE_PATH=/path/to/library zf --setup
Your are encourged to read more in the link that follows.
Zend_Tool & CLI Setup Information
(available via the command line "zf --info")
* Home directory found in environment variable HOMEPATH with value \Users\admin
* Storage directory assumed in home directory at location \Users\admin/.zf/
* Storage directory does not exist at \Users\admin/.zf/
* Config file assumed in home directory at location \Users\admin/.zf.ini
* Config file does not exist at \Users\admin/.zf.ini
To change the setup of this tool, run: "zf --setup"
ok (took 0:04.038)
`
I've already set the ZF_INCLUDE_PATH via command line with a new zend-framework library.
I never had a clean install with anything related to zend.
Could someone help me with this?
Thanks
I presume from the paths you are working on a windows machine. Zend Studio uses the zend tool (zf.bat in windows) to create a project. To make it work you must have properly installed the zend tool, i.e. you must be able to open a console (WINDOWS+R, type cmd, type enter) and successfully run the zf command.
In your case probably is a path issue, that you can resolve following the instructions here: http://framework.zend.com/manual/en/zend.tool.framework.clitool.html#zend.tool.framework.clitool.setup-windows
In particular:
The most common setup in the Windows Win32 environment, is to copy the zf.bat and zf.php into the same directory as your PHP binary. This can generally be found in one of the following places:
C:\PHP
C:\Program Files\ZendServer\bin\
C:\WAMP\PHP\bin
You should be able to run php.exe on the command line. If you are not able to, first check the documentation that came with your PHP distribution, or ensure that the path to php.exe is in your Windows PATH environment variable.
The next order of business is to ensure that Zend Framework library is set up correctly inside of the system PHP include_path. To find out where your include_path is located, you can type php -i and look for the include_path variable, or more succinctly execute php -i | grep include_path if you have Cygwin setup with grep available. Once you have found where your include_path is located (this will generally be something like C:\PHP\pear, C:\PHP\share, C:\Program%20Files\ZendServer\share or similar), ensure that the contents of the library/ directory are put inside your include_path specified directory.
If you are running on Ubuntu or Debian--or maybe Linux in general--it now seems you must create the environment variable ZEND_TOOL_INCLUDE_PATH. Having zend framework in your include_path (or copying zend framework to you existing include_path) no longer seems to work.
To manually install the latest version zend framework on Ubuntu/Debian, this is what I did after downloading ZF and extracting it to ~/temp
sudo cp -R ~/temp/ZendFramework-1.11.11/library/Zend /usr/share/php
sudo cp -R ~/temp/ZendFramework-1.11.11/extras/library/ZendX /usr/share/php
sudo cp ~/temp/ZendFramework-1.11.11/bin/zf.sh /usr/bin
sudo cp ~/temp/ZendFramework-1.11.11/bin/zf.php /usr/bin
Next edit /etc/environment, if you want other programs, like Netbeans, to be able to invoke zf.sh. Edit ~/.pam_environment, if you want only the current user to execute zf.sh. Add this line:
ZEND_TOOL_INCLUDE_PATH=/usr/share/php
You may need to log out and log back in after doing this.