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Publishing to Packagist

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Our bundle is ready to be shared with the world! So let's take care of a few last details, and publish our bundle to Packagist!

Choosing a License

But, before we publish this anywhere, we need do some boring, but very important legal work. Go to choosealicense.com and find the license that works best for you. Symfony is licensed MIT, and that's definitely the best practice. Whatever you choose, copy the license, find your bundle code, and at the root, create the LICENSE file.

MIT License
Copyright (c) [year] [fullname]
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
SOFTWARE.

Pushing to GitHub

Legal stuff, done! Next, find your terminal: there are a bunch of uncommitted changes. Oh, before we add them, I made a mistake!

I have an extra tests/Controller/cache directory! Open IpsumApiControllerTest and find the getCacheDir() method. I meant to change this to use the same cache directory as FunctionalTest, which is already set to be ignored by git. Add a ../ to the path. Then, delete the extra cache/ dir. There's also an extra logs directory, but it's empty, so just ignore it.

// ... lines 1 - 26
class KnpULoremIpsumControllerKernel extends Kernel
{
// ... lines 29 - 55
public function getCacheDir()
{
return __DIR__.'/../cache/'.spl_object_hash($this);
}
}

Now move back to your terminal, add everything to git, give it an inspiring message, and commit!

With everything committed, let's push this to GitHub! Well, you can host it anywhere, but GitHub is the most common place. I'll click "New Repository", choose the KnpUniversity organization, and name it lorem-ipsum-bundle.

It's not required, but it's usually nice to name the repository the same as the package name in composer.json. Give it a clever description, make sure it's public, and create repository!

Copy the code to push to an existing repository, go find your terminal, quick! Paste, hit enter, wait impatiently... then... say hello to our new repository!

Registering on Packagist

With that done, we can now put our bundle up on Packagist! Go to packagist.org and make sure you're logged in. Then, it's super easy: click "Submit", copy the GitHub URL, paste, and click "Check".

This does some sanity checks in the background, like parsing your composer.json file and waiting for Jordi to search for any similar packages on Packagist, to help avoid duplication.

Looks ok! Moment of truth: Submit!

Boom! We are a package!

Auto-updating with the GitHub Service Hook

Oh, but notice this message:

The package is not auto-updated. Please setup the Github Service Hook

This is actually important. When we create a new tag in GitHub, we want Packagist to automatically see it.

Go back to GitHub, click Settings, Integration & services, "Add service" and find Packagist. You'll need to enter your username and a token you can find on your Packagist profile page. Then, add service!

Requiring the new Package

And, for now, we're done! We have a real package! Next, open our application's composer.json file. We're still using this path repository option. Let's finally install our package properly. Remove the repositories section.

Then, go to the terminal for your app, and, first, remove the current package:

composer remove knpuniversity/lorem-ipsum-bundle

Gone! And thanks to the Flex recipe, it also removed the bundle from bundles.php. Cool!

Now, lets re-install it:

composer require knpuniversity/lorem-ipsum-bundle

This downloads dev-master, so the master branch, because there's no tag yet. And! Flex re-added the bundle to bundles.php.

Writing a Decent README

Cool! But, go back to the GitHub page for our bundle. See anything missing? Yea, no README! That's not ok! If you go back to the "Symfony bundle best practices" page, this has an example README you can use to get started.

Head back to our code, I'll close a few files, then create a new README.md file. And, bam! I just wrote us a README file!

94 lines | LoremIpsumBundle/README.md
# Hello LoremIpsumBundle!
LoremIpsumBundle is a way for you to generate "fake text" into
your Symfony application, but with *just* a little bit more joy
than your normal lorem ipsum.
Install the package with:
```console
composer require knpuniversity/lorem-ipsum-bundle --dev
```
And... that's it! If you're *not* using Symfony Flex, you'll also
need to enable the `KnpU\LoremIpsumBundle\KnpULoremIpsumBundle`
in your `AppKernel.php` file.
## Usage
This bundle provides a single service for generating fake text, which
you can autowire by using the `KnpUIpsum` type-hint:
// ... lines 21 - 94

Don't worry, I'm not going to lecture you on how to write README files. Well, actually, can I take just one minute to point out the most important parts that I think people sometimes forget?

To start, make sure your bundle has these four parts. One, at the top, say what the bundle does in plain language! Two, show the composer require installation command. Three, give a simple usage example, before talking about any other technical jargon. And four, show the configuration.

After that, you can talk about whatever complex or theoretical stuff you want, like how to create a word provider.

Also, when you create code examples, there are two common mistakes. First, make sure you include the file path as a comment: people don't always know where a file should live. Second, don't create the code blocks here. Believe me, you'll make a mistake. Code them in a real app, paste them here, then tweak.

Oh, and for the configuration section, remember, you can run:

php bin/console config:dump knpu_lorem_ipsum

to get a full config tree to paste here. Oh, and, if the user needs to create a file - like knpu_lorem_ipsum.yaml, say that explicitly: sometimes people think they're doing something wrong if a file doesn't already exist.

A Recipe?

The last thing I would recommend is, if it makes sense, create a recipe for your bundle. Do this at github.com/symfony/recipes-contrib. We're not going to do this, but if your bundle needs a config file or any other setup, this is a huge way to make it easier to use.

If you don't create a recipe, Flex will at least enable the bundle automatically. And in a lot of cases - like for this bundle - that's enough.

Ok, just one topic left, and it's fun! Let's setup continuous integration on Travis CI so that we can be sure our tests are always passing.