06.

Flex, Recipes & Aliases

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We're going to install a totally new package into our app called the "security checker". The security checker is a tool that looks at your application's dependencies and tell you if any of them have known security vulnerabilities. But, full disclosure, as cool as that is... the real reason I want to install this library is because it's a great way to look at Symfony's all-important "recipe" system.

At your terminal, run:

composer require sec-checker --no-scripts

Tip

You can still download the security checker to see how its recipe works, but the API it uses has been discontinued in favor of other solutions. If you want to know more, see https://github.com/sensiolabs/security-checker

In a real app, you should probably pass --dev to add this to your dev dependencies... but it won't matter for us.

Flex Aliases

There is, however, something weird here. Specifically... sec-checker is not a valid package name! In the Composer world, every package must be something/something-else: it can't just be sec-checker. So what the heck is going on?

Back in PhpStorm, open up composer.json. When we started the project, we had just a few dependencies in this file. One of them is symfony/flex.

69 lines | composer.json
{
// ... lines 2 - 3
"require": {
"php": "^7.2.5",
"ext-ctype": "*",
"ext-iconv": "*",
"sensio/framework-extra-bundle": "^5.5",
"sensiolabs/security-checker": "^6.0",
"symfony/console": "5.0.*",
"symfony/dotenv": "5.0.*",
"symfony/flex": "^1.3.1",
"symfony/framework-bundle": "5.0.*",
"symfony/yaml": "5.0.*"
},
// ... lines 16 - 67
}

This is a composer plugin that adds two special features to Composer itself. The first is called "aliases".

At your browser, go to http://flex.symfony.com to find and big page full of packages.

Tip

The flex.symfony.com server was shut down in favor of a new system. But you can still see a list of all of the available recipes at https://bit.ly/flex-recipes!

Search for security. Better, search for sec-checker. Boom! This says that there is a package called sensiolabs/security-checker and it has aliases of sec-check, sec-checker, security-checker and some more.

The alias system is simple: because Symfony Flex is in our app, we can say composer require security-checker, and it will really download sensiolabs/security-checker.

You can see this in our terminal: we said sec-checker, but ultimately it downloaded sensiolabs/security-checker. That's also what Composer added to our composer.json file. So... aliases are just a nice shortcut feature... but it's kinda cool! You can almost guess an alias when you want to install something. Want a logger? Run composer require logger to get the recommended logger. Need to mail something? composer require mailer. Need to eat a cake? composer require cake!

Flex Recipes

The second feature that Flex adds to Composer is the really important one. It's the recipe system.

Back at the terminal, after installing the package, it said:

Symfony operations: 1 recipe configuring sensiolabs/security-checker.

Interesting. Run:

git status

Whoa! We expected composer.json and composer.lock to be modified... that's how composer works. But something also modified a symfony.lock file... and added a totally new security_checker.yaml file!

Ok, first, symfony.lock is a file that's managed by Flex. You don't need to worry about it, but you should commit it. It keeps a big list of which recipes have been installed.

So, who created the other file? Open it up: config/packages/security_checker.yaml.

services:
_defaults:
autowire: true
autoconfigure: true
SensioLabs\Security\SecurityChecker: null
SensioLabs\Security\Command\SecurityCheckerCommand: null

Each package you install may have a Flex "recipe". The idea is beautifully simple. Instead of telling people to install a package and then create this file, and update this other file in order to get things working, Flex executes a recipe which... just does that stuff for you! This file was added by the sensiolabs/security-checker recipe!

You don't need to worry about the specifics of what's inside this file right now. The point is, thanks to this file, we have a new bin/console command. Run:

php bin/console

See that security:check command? That wasn't there a second ago. It's there now thanks to the new YAML file. Try it:

php bin/console security:check

No packages have known vulnerabilities! Awesome!

How Recipes Work

Here is the big picture: thanks to the recipe system, whenever you install a package, Flex will check to see if that package has a recipe and, if it does, will install it. A recipe can do many things, like add files, create directories or even modify a few files, like adding new lines to your .gitignore file.

The recipe system is a game-changer. I love it because anytime I need a new package, all I need to do is install it. I don't need to add configuration files or modify anything because the recipe automates all that boring work.

Recipes can Modify Files

In fact, this recipe did something else we didn't notice. At the terminal, run:

git diff composer.json

We expected that Composer would add this new line to the require section. But there is also a new line under the scripts section. That was done by the recipe.

69 lines | composer.json
{
// ... lines 2 - 3
"require": {
// ... lines 5 - 8
"sensiolabs/security-checker": "^6.0",
// ... lines 10 - 14
},
// ... lines 16 - 45
"scripts": {
"auto-scripts": {
// ... lines 48 - 49
"security-checker security:check": "script"
},
// ... lines 52 - 57
},
// ... lines 59 - 67
}

Thanks to this, whenever you run composer install after it finishes, it automatically runs the security checker.

Tip

Running composer install will fail with 403 API error. It's ok, we will remove security checker in the next chapter so it won't be an issue. If you want to know more, see https://github.com/sensiolabs/security-checker

The point is: to use the security checker, the only thing we needed to do was... install it. Its recipe took care of the rest of the setup.

Now... if you're wondering:

Hey! Where the heck does this recipe live? Can I see it?

That's a great question! Let's find out where these recipes live and what they look like next.