Awesome
Tailor
Tailor is a CLI application to help you maintain your extensions. Tailor talks with the TER REST API and enables you to register new keys, update extension information and publish new versions to the extension repository.
Contents
- Prerequisites
- Installation
- Usage
- Manage your personal access token
- Register a new extension key
- Update the version in your extension files
- Publish a new version of an extension to TER
- Create a local artefact of an extension
- Update extension meta information
- Transfer ownership of an extension to another user
- Delete / abandon an extension
- Find and filter extensions on TER
- Publish a new version using tailor locally
- Publish a new version using your CI
- Exclude paths from packaging
- Overview of all available commands
- Author & License
Prerequisites
The TER REST API can be accessed providing a personal access token. You can create such token either on https://extensions.typo3.org/ after you've logged in, or directly using Tailor.
[!IMPORTANT] To create, refresh or revoke an access token with Tailor, you have to add your TYPO3.org credentials (see below). Even if it is possible to execute all commands using the TYPO3.org credentials for authentication, it is highly discouraged. That's why we have built token based authentication for the TER.
Provide your credentials by either creating a .env
file in the
project root folder or setting environment variables through your
system to this PHP script:
TYPO3_API_TOKEN=<your-token>
TYPO3_API_USERNAME=<your-t3o-username>
TYPO3_API_PASSWORD=<your-t3o-password>
[!NOTE] For an overview of all available environment variables, have a look at the
.env.dist
file.
[!TIP] You can also add environment variables directly on executing a command. This overrides any variable, defined in the
.env
file.
Example:
TYPO3_API_TOKEN="someToken" TYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY="ext_key" bin/tailor ter:details
This will display the extension details for extension ext_key
if
someToken
is valid (not expired/revoked and having at least the
extension:read
scope assigned).
Installation
Use Tailor as a dev dependency via composer of your extensions:
composer req --dev typo3/tailor
Usage
All commands, requesting the TER API, provide the -r, --raw
option. If set, the raw result will be returned. This can be
used for further processing e.g. by using some JSON processor.
Most of the commands require an extension key to work with. There are multiple possibilities to provide an extension key. These are - in the order in which they are checked:
- As argument, e.g.
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:details my_key
- As environment variable,
TYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY=my_key
- In your
composer.json
,[extra][typo3/cms][extension-key] = 'my_key'
This means, even if you have an extension key defined globally,
either as environment variable or in your composer.json
, you
can still run all commands for different extensions by adding
the desired extension key as argument to the command.
[!NOTE] If no extension key is defined, neither as an argument, as environment variable, nor in your
composer.json
, commands which require an extension key to be set, will throw an exception.
Manage your personal access token
Use the ter:token:create
command to create a new token:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:token:create --name="token for my_extension" --extensions=my_extension
The result will look like this:
Token type: bearer
Access token: eyJ0eXAOiEJKV1QiLCJhb
Refresh token: eyJ0eXMRxHRaF4hIVrEtu
Expires in: 604800
Scope: extension:read,extension:write
Extensions: my_extension
As you can see, this will create an access token which is only
valid for the extension my_extension
. The scopes are set to
extension:read,extension:write
since this is the default if
option --scope
is not provided. The same applies to the
expiration date which can be set with the option --expires
.
If the token threatens to expire, refresh it with ter:token:refresh
:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:token:refresh eyJ0eXMRxHRaF4hIVrEtu
This will generate new access and refresh tokens with the same options, initially set on creation.
To revoke an access token irretrievably, use ter:token:revoke
:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:token:revoke eyJ0eXAOiEJKV1QiLCJhb
Register a new extension key
To register a new extension, use ter:register
by providing
your desired extension key as argument:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:register my_extension
This registers the key my_extension
and returns following
confirmation:
Key: my_extension
Owner: your_username
Update the version in your extension files
Prior to publishing a new version, you have to update the
version in your extensions ext_emconf.php
file. This can
be done using the set-version
command.
./vendor/bin/tailor set-version 1.2.0
If your extension also contains a Documentation/Settings.cfg
file, the command will also update the release
and version
information in it. You can disable this feature by either
using --no-docs
or by setting the environment variable
TYPO3_DISABLE_DOCS_VERSION_UPDATE=1
.
[!TIP] It's also possible to use the
--path
option to specify the location of your extension. If not given, your current working directory is search for theext_emconf.php
file.
[!NOTE] The version will only be updated if already present in your
ext_emconf.php
. It won't be added by this command.
Publish a new version of an extension to TER
You can publish a new version of your extension using the
ter:publish
command. Therefore, provide the extension key
and version number as arguments followed by the path to the
extension directory or an artefact (a zipped version of your
extension). The latter can be either local or a remote file.
Using --path
:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:publish 1.2.0 my_extension --path=/path/to/my_extension
Using a local --artefact
:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:publish 1.2.0 my_extension --artefact=/path/to/any-zip-file/my_extension.zip
Using a remote --artefact
:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:publish 1.2.0 my_extension --artefact=https://github.com/my-name/my_extension/archive/1.2.0.zip
Using the root direcotry:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:publish 1.2.0 my_extension
If the extension key is defined as environment variable or
in your composer.json
, it can also be skipped. So using the
current root directory the whole command simplifies to:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:publish 1.2.0
[!IMPORTANT] A couple of directories and files are excluded from packaging by default. Read more about excluding paths from packaging below.
[!NOTE] The REST API, just like the the TER, requires an upload comment to be set. This can be achieved using the
--comment
option. If not set, Tailor will automatically useUpdated extension to <version>
as comment.
Create a local artefact of an extension
You can generate a local artefact of your extension using the
create-artefact
command. This will generate a zip archive
ready to be uploaded to TER (which is not covered by this
command, have a look at the ter:publish
command instead).
Provide the version number and extension key as arguments followed by the path to the extension directory or an artefact (a zipped version of your extension). The latter can be either local or a remote file.
Using --path
:
./vendor/bin/tailor create-artefact 1.2.0 my_extension --path=/path/to/my_extension
Using a local --artefact
:
./vendor/bin/tailor create-artefact 1.2.0 my_extension --artefact=/path/to/any-zip-file/my_extension.zip
Using a remote --artefact
:
./vendor/bin/tailor create-artefact 1.2.0 my_extension --artefact=https://github.com/my-name/my_extension/archive/1.2.0.zip
Using the root directory:
./vendor/bin/tailor create-artefact 1.2.0 my_extension
If the extension key is defined as environment variable or
in your composer.json
, it can also be skipped. So using the
current root directory the whole command simplifies to:
./vendor/bin/tailor create-artefact 1.2.0
[!IMPORTANT] A couple of directories and files are excluded from packaging by default. Read more about excluding paths from packaging below.
Update extension meta information
You can update the extension meta information, such as the
composer name, or the associated tags with the ter:update
command.
To update the composer name:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:update my_extension --composer=vender/my_extension
To update the tags:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:update my_extension --tags=some-tag,another-tag
Please use ./vendor/bin/tailor ter:update -h
to see the full
list of available options.
[!IMPORTANT] All options set with this command will overwrite the existing data. Therefore, if you, for example, just want to add another tag, you have to add the current ones along with the new one. You can use
ter:details
to get the current state.
Transfer ownership of an extension to another user
It's possible to transfer one of your extensions to another user.
Therefore, use the ter:transfer
command providing the extension
key to be transferred and the TYPO3.org username of the recipient.
Since you won't have any access to the extension afterwards, the command asks for your confirmation before sending the order to the REST API.
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:transfer some_user my_extension
This transfers the extension my_extension
to the user
some_user
and returns following confirmation:
Key: my_extension
Owner: some_user
[!TIP] For automated workflows the confirmation can be skipped with the
-n, --no-interaction
option.
Delete / abandon an extension
You can easily delete / abandon extensions with Tailor using
the ter:delete
command. This either removes the extension
entirely or just abandons it if the extension still has public
versions.
Since you won't have any access to the extension afterwards, the command asks for your confirmation before sending the order to the REST API.
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:delete my_extension
This will delete / abandon the extension my_extension
.
[!TIP] For automated workflows the confirmation can be skipped with the
-n, --no-interaction
option.
Find and filter extensions on TER
Tailor can't only be used for managing your extensions but
also to find others. Therefore, use ter:find
by adding some
filters:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:find
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:find --typo3-version=9
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:find --typo3-author=some_user
First command will find all public extensions. The second
and third one will only return extensions which match the
filter. In this case being compatible with TYPO3 version
9
or owned by some_user
.
To limit / paginate the result, you can use the options
--page
and --per_page
:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:find --page=3 --per_page=20
Specific extension details
You can also request more details about a specific extension
using the ter:details
command:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:details my_extension
This will return details about the extension my_extension
like the current version, the author, some meta information
and more. Similar to the extension detail page on
extension.typo3.org.
Specific extension version details
If you like to get details about a specific version of an
extension, ter:version
can be used:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:version 1.0.0 my_extension
This will return details about version 1.0.0
of extension
my_extension
.
Details for all versions of an extension
You can also get the details for all versions of an extension
with ter:versions
:
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:versions my_extension
This will return the details for all version of the extension
my_extension
.
Publish a new version using tailor locally
Step 1: Update the version in your extension files
./vendor/bin/tailor set-version 1.5.0
Step 2: Commit the changes and add a tag
git commit -am "[RELEASE] A new version was published"
git tag -a 1.5.0
Step 3: Push this to your remote repository
git push origin --tags
Step 4: Push this version to TER
./vendor/bin/tailor ter:publish 1.5.0
[!NOTE] Both
set-version
andter:publish
provide options to specify the location of your extension. If, like in the example above, non is set, Tailor automatically uses your current working directory.
Publish a new version using your CI
You can also integrate tailor into you GitHub workflow respectively your GitLab pipeline. Therefore, Step 1, Step 2 and Step 3 from the above example are the same. Step 4 could then be done by your integration.
Please have a look at the following examples describing how such integration could look like for GitHub workflows and GitLab pipelines.
Github actions workflow
The workflow will only be executed when pushing a new tag. This can either be done using Step 3 from above example or by creating a new GitHub release which will also add a new tag.
The workflow furthermore requires the GitHub secrets TYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY
and TYPO3_API_TOKEN
to be set. Add them at "Settings -> Secrets -> New
repository secret".
[!NOTE] If your
composer.json
file contains the extension key at[extra][typo3/cms][extension-key] = 'my_key'
(this is good practice anyway), theTYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY
secret and assignment in the below GitHub action example is not needed, tailor will pick it up.
The version is automatically fetched from the tag and validated to match the required pattern.
The commit message from Step 2 is used as the release comment. If it's empty, a static text will be used.
To see the following workflow in action, please have a look at the tailor_ext example extension.
name: publish
on:
push:
tags:
- '*'
jobs:
publish:
name: Publish new version to TER
if: startsWith(github.ref, 'refs/tags/')
runs-on: ubuntu-20.04
env:
TYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY: ${{ secrets.TYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY }}
TYPO3_API_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.TYPO3_API_TOKEN }}
steps:
- name: Checkout repository
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Check tag
run: |
if ! [[ ${{ github.ref }} =~ ^refs/tags/[0-9]{1,3}.[0-9]{1,3}.[0-9]{1,3}$ ]]; then
exit 1
fi
- name: Get version
id: get-version
run: echo "version=${GITHUB_REF/refs\/tags\//}" >> $GITHUB_ENV
- name: Get comment
id: get-comment
run: |
readonly local comment=$(git tag -n10 -l ${{ env.version }} | sed "s/^[0-9.]*[ ]*//g")
if [[ -z "${comment// }" ]]; then
echo "comment=Released version ${{ env.version }} of ${{ env.TYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY }}" >> $GITHUB_ENV
else
{
echo 'comment<<EOF'
echo "$comment"
echo EOF
} >> "$GITHUB_ENV"
fi
- name: Setup PHP
uses: shivammathur/setup-php@v2
with:
php-version: 7.4
extensions: intl, mbstring, json, zip, curl
tools: composer:v2
- name: Install tailor
run: composer global require typo3/tailor --prefer-dist --no-progress --no-suggest
- name: Publish to TER
run: php ~/.composer/vendor/bin/tailor ter:publish --comment "${{ env.comment }}" ${{ env.version }}
[!IMPORTANT] If you're using tags with a leading
v
the above example needs to be adjusted.
- The regular expression in step Check tag should be:
^refs/tags/v[0-9]{1,3}.[0-9]{1,3}.[0-9]{1,3}$
- The output format in step Get version should be:
${GITHUB_REF#refs/tags/v}
- The variable declaration in step Get comment should be:
$(git tag -n10 -l v${{ env.version }} | sed "s/^v[0-9.]*[ ]*//g")
GitHub actions from TYPO3 community
Additionally, to further simplify your workflow, you can also use the typo3-uploader-ter GitHub action from TYPO3 community member Tomas Norre. For more information about the usage, please refer to the corresponding README.
GitLab pipeline
The job will only be executed when pushing a new tag. The upload comment is taken from the message in the tag.
The job furthermore requires the GitLab variables
TYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY
and TYPO3_API_TOKEN
to be set.
[!NOTE] If your
composer.json
file contains your extension key, you can remove theTYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY
variable, the check and the assignment in the GitLab pipeline, since Tailor automatically fetches this key then.
The variable CI_COMMIT_TAG
is set by GitLab automatically.
"Publish new version to TER":
stage: release
image: composer:2
only:
- tags
before_script:
- composer global require typo3/tailor
script:
- >
if [ -n "$CI_COMMIT_TAG" ] && [ -n "$TYPO3_API_TOKEN" ] && [ -n "$TYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY" ]; then
echo -e "Preparing upload of release ${CI_COMMIT_TAG} to TER\n"
# Cleanup before we upload
git reset --hard HEAD && git clean -fx
# Upload
TAG_MESSAGE=`git tag -n10 -l $CI_COMMIT_TAG | sed 's/^[0-9.]*[ ]*//g'`
echo "Uploading release ${CI_COMMIT_TAG} to TER"
/tmp/vendor/bin/tailor ter:publish --comment "$TAG_MESSAGE" "$CI_COMMIT_TAG" "$TYPO3_EXTENSION_KEY"
fi;
Exclude paths from packaging
A couple of directories and files are excluded
from packaging by default. You can find the configuration in
conf/ExcludeFromPackaging.php
.
If you like, you can also use a custom configuration. Just add the
path to your custom configuration file to the environment variable
TYPO3_EXCLUDE_FROM_PACKAGING
. This file must return an
array
with the keys directories
and files
on root level.
Overview of all available commands
Commands | Arguments | Options | Description |
---|---|---|---|
set-version | version | --path <br/>--no-docs | Update the version in extension files |
ter:delete | extensionkey | Delete an extension. | |
ter:details | extensionkey | Fetch details about an extension. | |
ter:find | --page <br/>--per-page <br/>--author <br/>--typo3-version | Fetch a list of extensions from TER. | |
ter:publish | version <br/>extensionkey | --path <br/>--artefact <br/>--comment | Publishes a new version of an extension to TER. |
create-artefact | version <br/>extensionkey | --path <br/>--artefact | Create an artefact file (zip archive) of an extension. |
ter:register | extensionkey | Register a new extension key in TER. | |
ter:token:create | --name <br/>--expires <br/>--scope <br/>--extensions | Request an access token for the TER. | |
ter:token:refresh | token | Refresh an access token for the TER. | |
ter:token:revoke | token | Revoke an access token for the TER. | |
ter:transfer | username <br/>extensionkey | Transfer ownership of an extension key. | |
ter:update | extensionkey | --composer <br/>--issues <br/>--repository <br/>--manual <br/>--paypal <br/>--tags | Update extension meta information. |
ter:version | version <br/>extensionkey | Fetch details about an extension version. | |
ter:versions | extensionkey | Fetch details for all versions of an extension. |
General options for all commands
-r, --raw
Return result as raw object (e.g. json) - Only for commands, requesting the TER API-h, --help
Display help message-q, --quiet
Do not output any message-v, --version
Display the CLI applications' version-n, --no-interaction
Do not ask any interactive question-v|vv|vvv, --verbose
Increase the verbosity of messages: 1 for normal output, 2 for more verbose output and 3 for debug--ansi
Force ANSI output--no-ansi
Disable ANSI output
Author & License
Created by Benni Mack and Oliver Bartsch.
MIT License, see LICENSE