Potentially useful for fork owners to test out phar deployment without affecting
the official psalm/phar repo.
To enable phar deployments from your own fork of psalm:
- Enable builds with Travis
- Create a github repository to hold recieve the built phar packages
- Create a new dedicated github user for the deployments
- From your main github account, invite the new user to collobrate on the phar repository
- From the new user's account, accept the invitation
- From the new user's account, obtain a 'new personal access token' ( https://github.com/settings/tokens/new ) with repo scope
- In travis settings for your fork of psalm, set two environment
variables:
- PHAR_REPO_SLUG - this should be the name the phar repo you set up earlier, e.g. fred/phar
- GITHUB_TOKEN - This is the personal access token of the new user you obtained above. Anyone who knows this token
can push to the repository, so keep it secret. Make sure 'Display value in build log' is
switched off'
Now any push to branches in your fork of psalm, should automatically
result in a commit containing the phar file in your phar repository.
Previous versions failed. This will delete all files except hidden files. The only hidden files that we expect to exist at present are the .git directory and .gitignore
I'm guessing there's no difference between the two which means one needs 7.1 and the other only needs 7.0
Co-Authored-By: Bruce Weirdan <weirdan@gmail.com>
Previously a user of the phar distribution would have to invoke psalm as
`vendor/bin/psalm.phar`. This is different to the command given in
the psalm documentation, `vendor/bin/psalm`
I also copied all files from the psalm/phar repo into
assets/psalm-phar, so that development can be concentrated in this repo.
The travis-deploy-phar.sh should copy any changes made back into the
psalm/phar.git repo.