PHPArkitect helps you to keep your PHP codebase coherent and solid, by permitting to add some architectural constraint check to your workflow. You can express the constraint that you want to enforce, in simple and readable PHP code, for example:
Rule::allClasses()
->that(new ResideInOneOfTheseNamespaces('App\Controller'))
->should(new HaveNameMatching('*Controller'))
->because("it's a symfony naming convention");
Currently, you can check if a class:
- depends on a namespace
- extends another class
- not extends another class
- have a name matching a pattern
- not have a name matching a pattern
- implements an interface
- not implements an interface
- depends on a namespace
- don't have dependency outside a namespace
- reside in a namespace
- not reside in a namespace
Check out this demo project to get an idea on how write rules
composer require --dev phparkitect/phparkitect
Sometimes your project can conflict with one or more of Phparkitect's dependencies. In that case you may find the Phar (a self-contained PHP executable) useful.
The Phar can be downloaded from GitHub:
wget https://github.com/phparkitect/arkitect/releases/latest/download/phparkitect.phar
chmod +x phparkitect.phar
./phparkitect.phar check
To use this tool you need to launch a command via bash:
phparkitect check
With this command phparkitect
will search all rules in the root of your project the default config file called phparkitect.php
.
You can also specify your configuration file using --config
option like this:
phparkitect check --config=/project/yourConfigFile.php
Example of configuration file phparkitect.php
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Arkitect\ClassSet;
use Arkitect\CLI\Config;
use Arkitect\Expression\ForClasses\HaveNameMatching;
use Arkitect\Expression\ForClasses\NotHaveDependencyOutsideNamespace;
use Arkitect\Expression\ForClasses\ResideInOneOfTheseNamespaces;
use Arkitect\Rules\Rule;
return static function (Config $config): void {
$mvcClassSet = ClassSet::fromDir(__DIR__.'/mvc');
$rules = [];
$rules[] = Rule::allClasses()
->that(new ResideInOneOfTheseNamespaces('App\Controller'))
->should(new HaveNameMatching('*Controller'))
->because('we want uniform naming');
$rules[] = Rule::allClasses()
->that(new ResideInOneOfTheseNamespaces('App\Domain'))
->should(new NotHaveDependencyOutsideNamespace('App\Domain'))
->because('we want protect our domain');
$config
->add($mvcClassSet, ...$rules);
};
By default, a progress bar will show the status of the ongoing analysis.
If you want to exclude some classes from the parser you can use the except
function inside your config file like this:
$rules[] = Rule::allClasses()
->except('App\Controller\FolderController\*')
->that(new ResideInOneOfTheseNamespaces('App\Controller'))
->should(new HaveNameMatching('*Controller'))
->because('we want uniform naming');
You can use wildcards or the exact name of a class.
You can add parameters when you launch the tool. At the moment you can add these parameters and options:
-v
: with this option you launch Arkitect with the verbose mode to see every parsed file--config
: with this parameter, you can specify your config file instead of the default. like this:
phparkitect check --config=/project/yourConfigFile.php
--target-php-version
: with this parameter, you can specify which PHP version should use the parser. This can be useful to debug problems and to understand if there are problems with a different PHP version. Supported PHP versions are: 7.1, 7.2, 7.3, 7.4, 8.0, 8.1