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We are using PHPCI and composer. The server which runs PHPCI is on PHP 5.3.

For a project we added the Facebook PHP SDK, using composer. It requires PHP 5.4. Composer gets triggered by PHPCI and get executed. But because the CI server just got PHP 5.3 composer failed with the error message:

facebook/php-sdk-v4 4.0.9 requires php >=5.4.0 -> no matching package found.

This let fail my build in PHPCI, of course.

Is there a possibility to skip this requirement? Maybe by adding an option to composer.json? Or a parameter to composer.phar call?

0

3 Answers 3

438

I've found the option:

composer install --ignore-platform-reqs

Ignore platform requirements (php & ext- packages).


Alternative: Specify your projects' PHP version

You can skip the platform checks by configuring composer.json#/config/platform/php with the PHP version to use.

Composer will fetch packages based on that configured PHP version then.

So when you need to tell Composer the PHP version for your projects dependencies, you can (and should) specify the PHP version if different than the PHP version you execute composer with in your composer.json project configuration file (AKA root package):

{
    "config": {
       "platform": {
           "php": "5.6.6"
       }
    }
}

Here PHP 5.6.6 version is exemplary, it could be 8.0.4 or any other PHP version.

This also documents the target (platform) PHP configuration. Additionally installed PHP extensions and library versions can be specified.

Compare: Config: platform - Composer documentation

6
  • How can i ignore private repository. Some package require private repo. Dec 23, 2017 at 2:16
  • 1
    Awesome. It's useful when php cli is not reflecting a version change yet. Nov 21, 2018 at 17:14
  • In Composer 2 there is a new command, which can get used: php.watch/articles/composer-ignore-platform-req
    – Armin
    Jul 30, 2020 at 7:37
  • 1
    You can also use --ignore-platform-reqs=php if you want to make sure it is only ignoring the php version requirement. Jan 26, 2021 at 16:13
  • 1
    Actually it's --ignore-platform-req php (singular) and only works till Composer 2.
    – Armin
    Jan 28, 2021 at 17:08
30

For many commands, you can tell composer to bypass php version check, with parameter "--ignore-platform-reqs":

composer COMMAND --ignore-platform-reqs

this will bypass php version specification.

Be aware that the software may work or not: php version specification is there because somewhere in the code is needed at least the specified php version, so if you use that code the software will break.

1
  • 2
    --ignore-platform-reqs is not for all commands available, as your answer implies.
    – Armin
    Jan 3, 2020 at 0:22
-15

If anything requires a specific version of PHP, it won't run in a lower version of PHP. You will properbly still recieve errors when bypassing the PHP requirement.

Btw, PHP 5.3 is no longer maintained, I would strongly recommend updating the PHPCI server.

6
  • 6
    First I would like to know how to bypass the PHP requirement.
    – Armin
    Oct 6, 2014 at 9:02
  • 1
    You can't and you won't as the code won't work in a lower php version
    – Wouter J
    Oct 6, 2014 at 9:06
  • 5
    It will. Just the CI server got the low PHP version. The server which contains the facebook SDK runs on PHP 5.4. It is just about the ci server, which packs everything to a nice deployable zip file.
    – Armin
    Oct 6, 2014 at 13:34
  • 1
    Although PHP 5.3 is no longer maintained by the core PHP developers, some flavours of Linux still support it and will do for a while yet. Ubuntu 12.04 LTS ships with 5.3 and is supported until April 2017 (wiki.ubuntu.com/LTS). Moving to 14.04 is the best upgrade path but there are breaking changes which require an amount of work to fix (Apache 2.4, php-fpm etc). Hence a lot of the internet still using 5.3.x. Mar 30, 2015 at 10:13
  • 4
    true unfortunately 99% of packages even the well supported ones don't have the proper requirements. It's more a indicator of what the developer is using than anything else. Feb 15, 2017 at 4:08

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