Setting Up Your Local Environment
From Joomla! Documentation
How to Setup a Local Environment for Joomla 4
With Joomla! 4 we have changed the development process. It is no longer possible to clone the repository and have a usable Joomla installation. We follow best practices and implement a build process for the CMS.
Quick Start Guide[edit]
The steps to setup your development environment depend on your operating system. We cannot write documentation for every operating system (OS), please use your favorite search engine to find a HowTo.
Tools You Need[edit]
- PHP - basically the same as you need for running a Joomla site, but you need the PHP CLI (command line interface) version. (See the Configuring a LAMPP server for PHP development page.)
- Composer - for managing Joomla's PHP dependencies. For help installing Composer, read the documentation at https://getcomposer.org/doc/00-intro.md.
- Node.js - for compiling Joomla's JavaScript and SASS files. For help installing Node.js, please follow the instructions available on https://nodejs.org/en/. Note, you will need NodeJS 12 or higher to install Joomla.
- Git - for version management.
Steps to Set up the Local Environment[edit]
- Clone the repository
- Checkout the branch of the latest release (currently 4.4-dev).
- Run composer install from the root of the git repo. (You can add --ignore-platform-reqs if you don't have the PHP-LDAP locally installed, and you don't need it.)
- Run npm ci (npm = package manager for the JavaScript, "ci" parameter means "clean install") from the root of the git repo. (Note, you need npm 6.13.4 or higher for this. Run npm install -g npm@lts to upgrade your version of npm to the LTS version. For Joomla 5, you need npm 10.1.0 or higher. Tip: With nvm (Node Version Manager) you can easily switch to other npm versions)
Linux and OSX users can set up the following bash alias by placing the following inside the ~/.bashrc file:
alias jclean="rm -rf administrator/templates/atum/css; \
rm -rf templates/cassiopeia/css; \
rm -rf administrator/templates/system/css; \
rm -rf templates/system/css; \
rm -rf media/; \
rm -rf node_modules/; \
rm -rf libraries/vendor/; \
rm -f administrator/cache/autoload_psr4.php; \
rm -rf installation/template/css"
alias jinstall="jclean; composer install; npm ci"
This will delete all the compiled files in your system and run a fresh install as one command by calling jinstall inside your Joomla install. You can also use the jclean command to swap back to a Joomla 3.x branch
A Bit Longer Start Guide[edit]
Joomla is similar to many other web tools these days. It has a large PHP part and it has more and more JavaScript code. While PHP coding doesn't need so much preparation, JavaScript needs a lot of tooling around. The main reason is that nobody writes code in a way that every browser understands, so the code needs transpiling from e.g. ES6 to a compatible version of JavaScript. The same is true for CSS. For Joomla we are using SASS and this will be converted to native CSS so that any browser understands it. On the downside, setting up a development environment is a bit more complicated but the tooling makes coding more convenient. Thanks to watchers and browser auto reload, you can see your changes in real time.
PHP[edit]
It should be enough to run composer install as this will install PHP dependencies saved in the composer.lock file. You can do this as many times as you like. It will only install new packages when the composer.lock file is changed. Don't run composer update as this will update all packages to newer versions and update the composer.lock file.
Note: You may need to run composer install with the --ignore-platform-reqs option to ignore platform requirements specified in Composer. That is, if you do not have PHP's LDAP extension installed.
Node/npm Scripts[edit]
Node.js comes with a package manager called NPM (in some ways the same as Composer). NPM has a run command and we have prepared some scripts to make your life easier. You have to run the commands for the root of the repository when you have changed JS or SASS files. Previously you needed to run npm ci once, to install dependencies.
npm run build:css[edit]
It will compile SASS files to CSS and also create the minified files.
npm run build:js[edit]
It will compile and transpile the JavaScript files to the correct format and create minified files.
npm run watch[edit]
This is the same as the build:js command but will watch for changes and automatically build updated files in the media directory. SASS files are not included yet.
npm run lint:js[edit]
This will perform a syntax check on all ES6 JavaScript files against the JavaScript code standard (for more information on the Joomla 4 codestyle standard please read the the coding standards manual at the coding standards manual.
npm run test[edit]
This will run a JavaScript testing suite.
Possible Issues[edit]
When running composer install you can run into these errors
Problem 1
- Installation request for joomla/ldap 2.0.0-beta -> satisfiable by joomla/ldap[2.0.0-beta].
- joomla/ldap 2.0.0-beta requires ext-ldap * -> the requested PHP extension ldap is missing from your system.
Problem 2
- Installation request for symfony/ldap v5.1.5 -> satisfiable by symfony/ldap[v5.1.5].
- symfony/ldap v5.1.5 requires ext-ldap * -> the requested PHP extension ldap is missing from your system.
The solution is to run the composer install with the --ignore-platform-reqs option to ignore platform requirements specified in Composer. That is, if you do not have PHP's LDAP extension installed.
composer install --ignore-platform-reqs
If you receive a login error such as shown below, delete the administrator/cache/autoload_psr4.php file.