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perseus logo


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Local git mirror for your PHP (composer) project dependencies that works together with Satis.

perseus is a successor out of and drop-in replacement for Medusa.

Table of contents

Whats wrong with Medusa?

Nothing. Really. Medusa is a great software. It works well for many people and companies. Thanks to Sebastien Armand, Instaclick Inc. and all others who have helped and contributed to this project. But it has its limitations, flaws and disadvantages like:

  • Very poor documentation (as mentioned in the readme)
  • Nearly no error handling (for API requests to Packagist, system commands like triggering git, etc.)
  • Long mirror/update runs, due to sequential procedure and single threaded nature (long runtimes can ruin a fast development workflow)
  • Stops the complete mirror/update run, if one package/url/composer.json is faulty and stops updating other packaging in the list
  • Need to implement auxiliary processes to make it work in a bigger engineering team like self-service to add new or remove old packages, monitoring and reliabilities

perseus was born out of the motivation to eliminate these points.

Features

  • Drop-in replacement for Medusa
  • Fully documented
  • Concurrency and usage of multiple threads for faster mirror/update runs
  • Serious error handling
  • Reporting of faulty packages or packages that can't be processed

Installation

From binary

We offer pre-compiled binaries of perseus for easy usage.

  1. Checkout our Releases page and choose the latest release
  2. Select your system architecture and operating system of your choice
  3. Download and extract the archive
  4. Switch to the extracted directory and fire a perseus version
  5. Have fun

From docker image

perseus is available as Docker image at andygrunwald/perseus. To download the image, fire:

$ docker pull andygrunwald/perseus

Commands can be executed like a normal installation in the format:

$ docker run andygrunwald/perseus <Command-Name> [Flags] <Parameter>

E.g. the add command:

$ docker run andygrunwald/perseus add --with-deps symfony/console /var/config/medusa-small.json

Inside the container, example medusa and satis configurations from the .docker folder are available in the path /var/config. Those can be used to play around.

From source

To install perseus from source, a running Golang installation is required.

$ go get github.com/andygrunwald/perseus
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/andygrunwald/perseus
$ go get ./...
$ make install
$ $GOPATH/bin/perseus

Usage

Add a new package

The add command will mirror the given down to disk (with dependencies if requested) and adds the package into the configured Satis.json file.

Usage:

$ perseus add <Package-Name> [Config-File]

Examples:

$ perseus add "twig/twig"
$ perseus add --with-deps "symfony/console"
$ perseus add --with-deps "guzzlehttp/guzzle" /var/config/medusa.json

Mirror all packages

The mirror command will mirror all configured packages from medusa.json down to disk (incl. dependencies) and adds all packages into the configured satis.json file.

Usage:

$ perseus mirror [Config-File]

Examples:

$ perseus mirror
$ perseus mirror /var/config/medusa.json

Update all mirrored packages

The update command will update all mirrored packages that are located at disk and update them to the latest state. To find all packages it will do a search in the path configured at repodir.

Usage:

$ perseus update [Config-File]

Examples:

$ perseus update
$ perseus update /var/config/medusa.json

Show me the version of perseus

Print the version number incl. build details of perseus.

Usage:

$ perseus version

Examples:

$ perseus version
perseus v0.1.0-Alpha-4C8098CE24FA56AC7DFD512EA756F95AD9D941EB darwin/amd64 BuildDate: 2017-05-09T16:35:17Z

Configuration

perseus has two different kinds of configurations:

  1. Process settings (via command line flags)
  2. medusa.json configuration file

Command line flags

Several settings can be set by command line flags:

  • Flag --config: Path to the medusa.json configuration (default: medusa.json)
  • Flag --numOfWorkers: Number of worker used, when a concurrent process is started (default: number of available CPUs)

medusa.json configuration file

Perseus is mainly configured with a JSON file (like Medusa). Here is a minimalistic example:

{
    "repositories": [
        {
            "name": "myvendor/package",
            "url": "git@othervcs:myvendor/package.git"
        },
        ...
    ],
    "require": [
        "symfony/symfony",
        "monolog/monolog",
        ...
    ],
    "repodir": "/tmp/perseus/git-mirror",
    "satisurl": "http://php.pkg.company.tld/git-mirror",
    "satisconfig": "./satis.json"
}

In the next sections an explaination of the single configuration parts can be found.

repositories

A list of custom packages that are not available on the configured https://packagist.org/. Per each repository, a name and a url must be given.

require

A list of repositories to mirror down to disk.

The packages will be searched on the given Packagist instance. Per default the standard instance https://packagist.org/ will be used.

repodir

Directory to write all repositories to.

This directory needs to be writable.

satisurl

URL of the future satis installation.

This URL will be used to prefix all package URLs in the final satis configuration.

satisconfig

At the end of the run, perseus write a valid satis configuration file. In this setting a valid path to a writeable satis configuration is expected. Further more the file needs to be exists before and it needs to be a valid satis configuration.

preseus itself will only touch and edit the repositories section in this satis configuration. All other parts of the file will be untouched.

Example satis.json
{
    "archive": {
        "directory": "dist",
        "format": "tar",
        "prefix-url": "http://php.pkg.company.tld/packages/",
        "skip-dev": true
    },
    "homepage": "http://php.pkg.company.tld/packages/",
    "name": "private php package repositories",
    "providers": true,
    "repositories": [
        {
            "type": "git",
            "url": "http://php.pkg.company.tld/git-mirror/symfony/debug.git"
        },
        ...
    ],
    "require-all": true
}

Drop-in replacement

We are a Drop-in replacement for Medusa. We have the same command structure and functionality.

But in one point we are not compatible: Logging. We log way more information during the process as the original Medusa.

Be aware: If you parse the logs of the original Medusa process, you might have to adjust your scripts.

Development

Build

To build the application, fire

$ make build

A binary, called perseus should appear in the same directory.

Build the docker image

To build the docker image on your own machine, fire

$ docker build -t andygrunwald/perseus .

Unit tests

A running go installation is required to execute unit tests. To execute them, run:

$ make test

Tip: If you plan to contribute via a Pull Request, the use of unit tests is encouraged.

Release a new version

We use goreleaser to build and ship our releases. Further more we follow semantic versioning. Here is how you create and ship a ner version:

  1. Export a GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable with the repo scope selected. This will be used to deploy releases to your GitHub repository. Create yours here.

    $ export GITHUB_TOKEN="YOUR_TOKEN"
  2. GoReleaser uses the latest Git tag of your repository. Create a tag:

    $ git tag -a v0.1.0 -m "First release"

    If you don't want to create a tag yet but instead simply create a package based on the latest commit, then you can also use the --snapshot flag.

  3. Now you can run GoReleaser at the root of your repository:

    $ goreleaser
  4. That's it! Check your GitHub project's release page.

Project background

The name "perseus"

Naming projects is hard. I often struggle with this. The name needs to be simple, "catchy" and easy to remember.

In this case it was easy. Medusa was part of the greek mythology. I started looking in this direction and found Perseus. Checkout Perseus with the Head of Medusa for more details..

Credits

The perseus logo was created by @mre.
The original Gopher was designed by Renee French.
Go Gopher vector illustration by Hugo Arganda (@argandas)
Hosted at the gopher-vector repository.
The Medusa vector art was adjusted from Amanda Downs work from the Noun Project.
The perseus font is called Dalek created by K-Type.

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Local git mirror for your PHP (composer) project dependencies that works together with Satis.

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