rector/build/target-repository
Tomas Votruba a8b01f217b
[automated] Re-Generate Nodes/Rectors Documentation (#619)
Co-authored-by: TomasVotruba <TomasVotruba@users.noreply.github.com>
2021-08-08 00:14:44 +00:00
..
.docker Add Docker on prefixed/downgraded version only (#6368) 2021-05-06 13:24:32 +02:00
.github [GHA] Fix Along other packages on prefixed rector (#586) 2021-08-03 13:47:31 +00:00
docs [automated] Re-Generate Nodes/Rectors Documentation (#619) 2021-08-08 00:14:44 +00:00
e2e skip self type 2021-07-06 01:10:55 +02:00
.dockerignore [Docker] include prefixed vendor 2021-05-06 13:43:22 +02:00
.gitattributes fix directory export-ignore path 2021-06-05 19:39:22 +02:00
Dockerfile [Docker] moving around 2021-05-08 01:01:51 +02:00
README.md Update README.md (#472) 2021-07-21 10:48:06 +02:00
bootstrap.php prioritize ContainerConfigurator 2021-05-13 20:10:00 +01:00
composer.json Upgrade phpstan/phpstan to 0.12.94 (#585) 2021-08-03 20:32:38 +07:00

README.md

Rector - Instant Upgrades and Automated Refactoring

Downloads


Rector instantly upgrades and refactors the PHP code of your application. It can help you 2 major areas:

1. Instant Upgrades

Rector now supports upgrades from PHP 5.3 to 8.0 and major open-source projects like Symfony, PHPUnit, Nette, Laravel, CakePHP, Doctrine and Typo3 out of the box. Do you want to be constantly on the latest PHP/framework version without effort?

Use Rector to handle instant upgrades for you.

2. Automated Refactoring

Do you have code quality you need, but struggle to keep it with new developers in your team? Do you want see smart code-reviews even when every senior developers sleeps?

Add Rector to your CI and let it continuously refactor your code and keep the code quality high.


Read a First Book About Rector

Are you curious, how Rector works internally, how to create your own rules and test them and why Rector was born? In May 2021 we've released the very first book: Rector - The Power of Automated Refactoring.

By buying a book you directly support maintainers who are working on Rector.


Documentation

For Rule Developers and Contributors

Install

composer require rector/rector --dev

Running Rector

There a 2 main ways to use Rector:

  • a single rule, to have the change under control
  • or group of rules called sets

To use them, create a rector.php in your root directory:

vendor/bin/rector init

And modify it:

// rector.php
use Rector\Php74\Rector\Property\TypedPropertyRector;
use Rector\Set\ValueObject\SetList;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Loader\Configurator\ContainerConfigurator;

return static function (ContainerConfigurator $containerConfigurator): void {
    // here we can define, what sets of rules will be applied
    // tip: use "SetList" class to autocomplete sets
    $containerConfigurator->import(SetList::CODE_QUALITY);

    // register single rule
    $services = $containerConfigurator->services();
    $services->set(TypedPropertyRector::class);
};

Then dry run Rector:

vendor/bin/rector process src --dry-run

Rector will show you diff of files that it would change. To make the changes, drop --dry-run:

vendor/bin/rector process src

Note: rector.php is loaded by default. For different location, use --config option.

Note: Rector will only update legacy code to utilize new features which are supported by the PHP version defined in your composer.json file. For instance, if require.php is >=7.2.5, Rector will not make changes which are only available for PHP versions after 7.2.5.


Configuration

// rector.php
use Rector\Core\Configuration\Option;
use Rector\Core\ValueObject\PhpVersion;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\Loader\Configurator\ContainerConfigurator;

return static function (ContainerConfigurator $containerConfigurator): void {
    $parameters = $containerConfigurator->parameters();

    // paths to refactor; solid alternative to CLI arguments
    $parameters->set(Option::PATHS, [__DIR__ . '/src', __DIR__ . '/tests']);

    // is your PHP version different from the one your refactor to? [default: your PHP version], uses PHP_VERSION_ID format
    $parameters->set(Option::PHP_VERSION_FEATURES, PhpVersion::PHP_72);

    // Path to phpstan with extensions, that PHPSTan in Rector uses to determine types
    $parameters->set(Option::PHPSTAN_FOR_RECTOR_PATH, getcwd() . '/phpstan-for-config.neon');
};

Support

Rector is a tool that we develop and share for free, so anyone can automate their refactoring. But not everyone has dozens of hours to understand complexity of abstract-syntax-tree in their own time. That's why we provide commercial support - to save your time.

Would you like to apply Rector on your code base but don't have time for the struggle with your project? Hire us to get there faster.


How to Contribute

See the contribution guide.


Debugging

You can use --debug option, that will print nested exceptions output:

vendor/bin/rector process src/Controller --dry-run --debug

Or with Xdebug:

  1. Make sure Xdebug is installed and configured
  2. Add --xdebug option when running Rector
vendor/bin/rector process src/Controller --dry-run --xdebug

To assist with simple debugging Rector provides a 2 helpers to pretty-print AST-nodes:

use PhpParser\Node\Scalar\String_;

$node = new String_('hello world!');

// prints node to string, as PHP code displays it
print_node($node);

// dump nested node object with nested properties
dump_node($node);
// 2nd argument is how deep the nesting is - this makes sure the dump is short and useful
dump_node($node, 1);

Known Drawbacks

How to Apply Coding Standards?

Rector uses nikic/php-parser, built on technology called an abstract syntax tree (AST). An AST doesn't know about spaces and when written to a file it produces poorly formatted code in both PHP and docblock annotations. That's why your project needs to have a coding standard tool and a set of formatting rules, so it can make Rector's output code nice and shiny again.

We're using ECS with this setup.