php-qa-watch
Automate running your PHP QA toolset!
Installation
# npm $ npm i phly-php-qa-watch -g# yarn $ yarn global add phly-php-qa-watch
Usage
At its most basic, execute the watcher:
$ php-qa-watch
By default, the script, runs composer check
when any of the following change:
phpunit.xml.dist
phpcs.xml
- any PHP files under
src/
- any PHP files under
test/
You can alter the behavior via the following flags:
-d|--no-notifications
will disable system notifications when failures occur-w|--watch-files
allows you to provide a comma separated list of files/glob patterns to watch-c|--check-command
allows you to specify an alternate command to run in order to perform checks; defaults to "composer check"
Using either -h
or --help
will provide the usage message as well.
Using alternate checkers
To use an alternate tool or pipeline for checking your project, use the -c
or
--check-command
flags to provide one. As an example, perhaps you want to
combine several composer scripts, without writing an aggregate:
$ php-qa-watch -c "composer cs-lint && composer unit-test && composer mess-detector"
Alternately, perhaps you don't have composer scripts defined; you can just
specify an &&
'd set of commands in that case:
$ php-qa-watch -c "./vendor/bin/php-cs-fixer fix --dry-run -v --diff && phpunit --colors=always"
Specifying different files to watch
The -w
or --watch-files
flags allow you to specify a comma-separated list of
files, directories, or glob patterns detailing what files to watch for changes.
Let's combine this with the above example:
$ php-qa-watch \> -c "./vendor/bin/php-cs-fixer fix --dry-run -v --diff && phpunit --colors=always" \> -w ".php_cs,phpunit.xml,phpunit.xml.dist,src/**/*.php,test/**/*.php"
The above adds ensures that the .php_cs
and phpunit.xml
files are watched,
but not the phpcs.xml
(which is in the default set).
Disabling notifications
By default, php-qa-watch
will provide a system notification when the specified
checker fails. This is done to allow you to run the watcher in a hidden
terminal, and only raise it when you see a notification of a break.
If you do not want the notification, disable it with the -d
or
--no-notifications
flag.