Slow updating of composer dependencies, despite --prefer-dist flag

PhpSymfonyComposer Php

Php Problem Overview


Why does it take up to two minutes for my composer dependencies to update, even when there have been no changes?

A popular suggestion is to append the --prefer-dist flag:

php composer.phar update --prefer-dist

But this makes no difference in my case. Below is my composer.json file – am I missing something obvious?

{
    "name": "my-namespace/symfony",
    "type": "project",
    "description": "",
    "require": {
        "php": ">=5.3.3",
        "symfony/symfony": "2.3.*",
        "doctrine/orm": ">=2.2.3,<2.4-dev",
        "doctrine/doctrine-bundle": "1.2.*",
        "twig/extensions": "1.0.*",
        "symfony/assetic-bundle": "2.3.*",
        "symfony/monolog-bundle": "2.3.*",
        "sensio/framework-extra-bundle": "2.3.*",
        "sensio/generator-bundle": "2.3.*",
        "sensio/distribution-bundle": "2.2.*",
        "my-namespace/my-bundle": "1.0.*"
    },
   "repositories": [
        {
            "type": "vcs",
            "url": "http://username:[email protected]/my-bundle.git"
        }
    ],    
    "scripts": {
        "post-install-cmd": [
            "Sensio\\Bundle\\DistributionBundle\\Composer\\ScriptHandler::buildBootstrap",
            "Sensio\\Bundle\\DistributionBundle\\Composer\\ScriptHandler::clearCache",
            "Sensio\\Bundle\\DistributionBundle\\Composer\\ScriptHandler::installAssets",
            "Sensio\\Bundle\\DistributionBundle\\Composer\\ScriptHandler::installRequirementsFile"
        ],
        "post-update-cmd": [
            "Sensio\\Bundle\\DistributionBundle\\Composer\\ScriptHandler::buildBootstrap",
            "Sensio\\Bundle\\DistributionBundle\\Composer\\ScriptHandler::clearCache",
            "Sensio\\Bundle\\DistributionBundle\\Composer\\ScriptHandler::installAssets",
            "Sensio\\Bundle\\DistributionBundle\\Composer\\ScriptHandler::installRequirementsFile"
        ]
    },
    "config": {
        "bin-dir": "bin"
    },
    "minimum-stability": "dev",
    "extra": {
        "symfony-app-dir": "app",
        "symfony-web-dir": "web",
        "branch-alias": {
            "dev-master": "2.3-dev"
        }
    }
}

Php Solutions


Solution 1 - Php

This problem is often related to xdebug being loaded in your CLI environment. (It doesn't matter if xdebug is enabled or not.)

You can check whether xdebug is enabled using one of the followinc commands.

// Unix
php -m | grep xdebug
// Windows
php -m | findstr xdebug

Further information on what operations take so long can be gained by enabling maximum verbosity and profiling information. (Replace install with update if you are updating the packages.)

composer install --prefer-dist -vvv --profile

Solution 2 - Php

Factors that can slow down Composer:

  • As pointed out, xdebug can affect the performance of Composer. Running composer diagnose will also warn you about this.

  • Running update instead of install. People too often just run update constantly. This makes Composer go through the entire dependency resolving process, regardless of whether or not anything has changed. When you run install, Composer takes the requirements directly from your .lock file, skipping the dependency resolving process. You should only run update during the development lifecycle of your application. And even then, it's not something you have to run daily usually.

  • If you have a specific dependency that you update frequently yourself, you could try simplifying the process by running composer update vendor/package --with-dependencies instead.

  • Setting minimum-stability to dev. This greatly expands the amount of possibilities that the dependency resolver has to consider. You should almost never lower the minimum-stability to dev unless you absolutely have no other choice. Look into alternatives, such as temporarily using a inline @dev flag.

Solution 3 - Php

Seems like the problem was resolved, but this might help someone.

Whenever I ran composer install or update, it took more than 10 seconds just to fetch the https://packagist.org/packages.json file. Eventually I found out that the problem was related to IPv6, since fetching files from IPv4 sites took less than a second.
The problem is that my ISP doesn't support IPv6, but I had it enabled in my ethernet properties. After I unticked Internet Protocol Version 6 (TCP/IPv6) in my network settings, install/update speeds drastically improved (dropped from 200+ seconds to like 10)

Solution 4 - Php

You are using a private repository. This will not allow to download zipped version of the version you include, but must clone the repository. Additionally, it might be that the whole repository must be scanned to find the required version.

You should check whether using Satis is an option. That way you could prepare ZIPs of your own software and download it just like the things hosted on Github (which has an API for this that is used by Composer to allow downloading ZIPs even if they are not explicitly prepared).

Solution 5 - Php

I was having this issue while running Symfony2 on a VM that had low memory. I increased the machine's memory and it improved drastically. You may check the memory on your system and see if it can be upgraded.

Solution 6 - Php

I had same issue with composer update, I updated composer itself to the latest version using composer selfupdate and now it's speed acceptable.

Solution 7 - Php

Indeed, xdebug is certainly going to slow things down. Uninstalling xdebug is not ideal though. A good option is to use HHVM and put it on composer duty.

Installing HHVM is pretty painless, and HHVM itself is much more rapid than PHP5. It's a double-win -- YMMV, but I got near-5x speed increase (on the eyeball dyno admittedly) in the composer usage I'd get even if xdebug weren't in the picture.

If you are on OS X, then this link might help (blog article I wrote on the matter):

http://circlical.com/blog/2015/11/11/slow-composer-on-os-x

Solution 8 - Php

Check if zip and unzip are installed. If they are missing, Composer will clone the repo instead of downloading a zipped release.

Solution 9 - Php

MY SOLUTION WINDOWS 10 x 64 bits WAMP user with Laravel, after weeks of slow composer update and composer require

you use need a thing called cacert.pem

https://curl.haxx.se/docs/caextract.html

then paste that file in your wamp main directory C:\wamp64\cacert.pem

then in the search tab search for php.ini open all the files with that name on sublime or any text editor

find a line called curl.cainfo and openssl.cafile

PUT YOUR PATH TO THIS FILE - see the example on my case:

curl.cainfo="C:\wamp64\cacert.pem"

and

openssl.cafile="C:\wamp64\cacert.pem"

do this on all the php.ini files you search before, in all the files!

OKAY RESTART SERVER that work for me, hope for you I wish someone before would make this comment! so I would not spend 2 weeks fixing it

also call

composer config --global repo.packagist composer https://packagist.org

this make the connection on https run this too

composer install --prefer-dist -vvv --profile

Solution 10 - Php

I had a problem due to having IPv6 enabled. Running the following fixed this problem:

sudo sh -c "echo 'precedence ::ffff:0:0/96 100' >> /etc/gai.conf"

You can find more information here: https://getcomposer.org/doc/articles/troubleshooting.md#operation-timed-out-ipv6-issues-

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionJonathanView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - PhpNicolai FröhlichView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - PhpalcoholView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - PhpRaiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - PhpSvenView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - PhpJohn SampsonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - PhpakoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - PhpSaevenView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - PhpStian SView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - PhpivnView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - PhpJosé VeríssimoView Answer on Stackoverflow