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Annotated Ruleset
PHP_CodeSniffer allows developers to design their own coding standards by creating a simple ruleset XML file that both pulls in sniffs from existing standards and customises them for the developer's needs. This XML file can be named anything you like, as long as it has an xml
extension and complies to the ruleset.xml format. The file can be stored anywhere, making it perfect for placing under version control with a project's source code and unit tests.
Once created, a ruleset file can be used with the --standard
command line argument. In the following example, PHP_CodeSniffer will use the coding standard defined in a custom ruleset file called custom_ruleset.xml:
$ phpcs --standard=/path/to/custom_ruleset.xml test.php
The following sample file documents the ruleset.xml format and shows you the complete range of features that the format supports. The file is designed for documentation purposes only and is not a working coding standard.
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<ruleset name="Custom Standard" namespace="MyProject\CS\Standard">
<!--
The name attribute of the ruleset tag is displayed
when running PHP_CodeSniffer with the -v command line
argument.
If you have custom sniffs, and they use a namespace prefix
that is different to the name of the directory containing
your ruleset.xml file, you can set the namespace prefix using
the namespace attribute of the ruleset tag.
For example, if your namespace format for sniffs is
MyProject\CS\Standard\Sniffs\Category, set the namespace to
MyProject\CS\Standard (everything up to \Sniffs\)
-->
<!--
The content of the description tag is not displayed anywhere
except in this file, so it can contain information for
developers who may change this file in the future.
-->
<description>A custom coding standard</description>
<!--
You can hard-code config values used by sniffs directly
into your custom standard. Note that this does not work
for config values that override command line arguments,
such as show_warnings and report_format.
The following tag is equivalent to the command line argument:
--runtime-set zend_ca_path /path/to/ZendCodeAnalyzer
-->
<config name="zend_ca_path" value="/path/to/ZendCodeAnalyzer"/>
<!--
If no files or directories are specified on the command line
your custom standard can specify what files should be checked
instead.
Note that file and directory paths specified in a ruleset are
relative to the ruleset's location, and that specifying any file or
directory path on the command line will ignore all file tags.
-->
<file>./path/to/directory</file>
<file>./path/to/file.php</file>
<!--
You can hard-code ignore patterns directly into your
custom standard so you don't have to specify the
patterns on the command line.
The following two tags are equivalent to the command line argument:
--ignore=*/tests/*,*/data/*
-->
<exclude-pattern>*/tests/*</exclude-pattern>
<exclude-pattern>*/data/*</exclude-pattern>
<!--
Patterns can be specified as relative if you would
like the relative path of the file checked instead of the
full path. This can sometimes help with portability.
The relative path is determined based on the paths you
pass into PHP_CodeSniffer on the command line.
-->
<exclude-pattern type="relative">^/tests/*</exclude-pattern>
<exclude-pattern type="relative">^/data/*</exclude-pattern>
<!--
You can hard-code command line values into your custom standard.
Note that this does not work for the command line values:
-v[v][v], -l, -d, --sniffs and --standard
The following tags are equivalent to the command line arguments:
--extensions=php,inc --report=summary --colors -sp
-->
<arg name="extensions" value="php,inc" />
<arg name="report" value="summary"/>
<arg name="colors"/>
<arg value="sp"/>
<!--
You can hard-code custom php.ini settings into your custom standard.
The following tag sets the memory limit to 64M.
-->
<ini name="memory_limit" value="64M"/>
<!--
If your helper classes need custom autoloading rules that you are
not able to include in other ways, you can hard-code files to include
before the ruleset is processed and any sniff classes have been loaded.
Note that autoload file paths are relative to the ruleset's location.
This is different to bootstrap files, which are loaded after the ruleset
has already been processed.
-->
<autoload>/path/to/autoload.php</autoload>
<autoload>/path/to/other/autoload.php</autoload>
<autoload>./autoload.php</autoload>
<!--
Include all sniffs in the PEAR standard. Note that the
path to the standard does not have to be specified as the
PEAR standard exists inside the PHP_CodeSniffer install
directory.
-->
<rule ref="PEAR"/>
<!--
Include all sniffs in an external standard directory. Note
that we have to specify the full path to the standard's
directory because it does not exist inside the PHP_CodeSniffer
install directory.
-->
<rule ref="/home/username/standards/mystandard"/>
<!--
Include everything in another ruleset.xml file. This is
really handy if you want to customise another developer's
custom standard. They just need to distribute their single
ruleset file to allow this.
-->
<rule ref="/home/username/standards/custom.xml"/>
<!--
Relative paths can also be used everywhere absolute paths are used.
Make sure the reference starts with ./ or ../ so PHP_CodeSniffer
knows it is a relative path.
-->
<rule ref="./standards/mystandard"/>
<rule ref="../username/custom.xml"/>
<!--
Include all sniffs in the Squiz standard except one. Note that
the name of the sniff being excluded is the code that the sniff
is given by PHP_CodeSniffer and is based on the file name and
path of the sniff class. You can display these codes using the
-s command line argument when checking a file.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz">
<exclude name="Squiz.PHP.CommentedOutCode"/>
</rule>
<!--
You can also exclude a single sniff message.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz">
<exclude name="Squiz.Strings.DoubleQuoteUsage.ContainsVar"/>
</rule>
<!--
Or, you can exclude a whole category of sniffs.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz">
<exclude name="Squiz.PHP"/>
</rule>
<!--
You can even exclude a whole standard. This example includes
all sniffs from the Squiz standard, but excludes any that come
from the Generic standard.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz">
<exclude name="Generic"/>
</rule>
<!--
Include some specific sniffs from the Generic standard.
Note again that the name of the sniff is the code that
PHP_CodeSniffer gives it.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.CodeAnalysis.UnusedFunctionParameter"/>
<rule ref="Generic.Commenting.Todo"/>
<rule ref="Generic.ControlStructures.InlineControlStructure"/>
<!--
If you are including sniffs that are not installed, you can
reference the sniff class using an absolute or relative path
instead of using the sniff code.
-->
<rule ref="/path/to/standards/Generic/Sniffs/Commenting/TodoSniff.php"/>
<rule ref="../Generic/Sniffs/ControlStructures/InlineControlStructureSniff.php"/>
<!--
Here we are including a specific sniff but also changing
the error message of a specific message inside the sniff.
Note that the specific code for the message, which is
TaskFound in this case, is defined by the sniff developer.
You can display these codes by using the -s command line
argument when checking a file.
Also note that this message has a variable inside it,
which is why it is important that sniffs use a printf style
format for their error messages.
We also drop the severity of this message from the
default value (5) so that it is hidden by default. It can be
displayed by setting the minimum severity on the PHP_CodeSniffer
command line. This is great if you want to use some messages
only in code reviews and not have them block code commits.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.Commenting.Todo.TaskFound">
<message>Please review this TODO comment: %s</message>
<severity>3</severity>
</rule>
<!--
You can also change the type of a message from error to
warning and vice versa.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.Commenting.Todo.CommentFound">
<type>error</type>
</rule>
<rule ref="Squiz.Strings.DoubleQuoteUsage.ContainsVar">
<type>warning</type>
</rule>
<!--
Or change the type of all messages produced by
a sniff, category, or standard.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.Formatting.MultipleStatementAlignment">
<type>error</type>
</rule>
<rule ref="Squiz.Strings">
<type>warning</type>
</rule>
<rule ref="PSR12">
<type>warning</type>
</rule>
<!--
Here we change two messages from the same sniff. Note how the
codes are slightly different because the sniff developer has
defined both a MaxExceeded message and a TooLong message. In the
case of this sniff, one is used for warnings and one is used
for errors.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.Files.LineLength.MaxExceeded">
<message>Line contains %2$s chars, which is more than the limit of %1$s</message>
</rule>
<rule ref="Generic.Files.LineLength.TooLong">
<message>Line longer than %s characters; contains %s characters</message>
</rule>
<!--
Some sniffs have public member vars that allow you to
customise specific elements of the sniff. In the case of
the Generic LineLength sniff, you can customise the limit
at which the sniff will throw warnings and the limit at
which it will throw errors.
The rule below includes the LineLength sniff but changes the
settings so the sniff will show warnings for any line longer
than 90 chars and errors for any line longer than 100 chars.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.Files.LineLength">
<properties>
<property name="lineLimit" value="90"/>
<property name="absoluteLineLimit" value="100"/>
</properties>
</rule>
<!--
Another useful example of changing sniff settings is
to specify the end of line character that your standard
should check for.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.Files.LineEndings">
<properties>
<property name="eolChar" value="\r\n"/>
</properties>
</rule>
<!--
Boolean values should be specified by using the strings
"true" and "false" rather than the integers 0 and 1.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.Formatting.MultipleStatementAlignment">
<properties>
<property name="maxPadding" value="8"/>
<property name="ignoreMultiLine" value="true"/>
</properties>
</rule>
<!--
Array values are specified by using "element" tags
with "key" and "value" attributes.
NOTE: This syntax is only supported in PHP_CodeSniffer
versions 3.3.0 and greater.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.PHP.ForbiddenFunctions">
<properties>
<property name="forbiddenFunctions" type="array">
<element key="delete" value="unset"/>
<element key="print" value="echo"/>
<element key="create_function" value="null"/>
</property>
</properties>
</rule>
<!--
Before version 3.3.0, array values are specified by using a string
representation of the array.
NOTE: This syntax is deprecated and will be removed in
PHP_CodeSniffer version 4.0
-->
<rule ref="Generic.PHP.ForbiddenFunctions">
<properties>
<property name="forbiddenFunctions" type="array" value="delete=>unset,print=>echo,create_function=>null" />
</properties>
</rule>
<!--
If you are including another standard, some array properties may
have already been defined. Instead of having to redefine them
you can choose to extend the property value instead. Any elements with
new keys will be added to the property value, and any elements with
existing keys will override the imported value.
NOTE: This syntax is is only supported in PHP_CodeSniffer
versions 3.4.0 and greater.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.PHP.ForbiddenFunctions">
<properties>
<property name="forbiddenFunctions" type="array" extend="true">
<element key="sizeof" value="count"/>
</property>
</properties>
</rule>
<!--
If you want to completely disable an error message in a sniff
but you don't want to exclude the whole sniff, you can
change the severity of the message to 0. In this case, we
want the Squiz DoubleQuoteUsage sniff to be included in our
standard, but we don't want the ContainsVar error message to
ever be displayed.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz.Strings.DoubleQuoteUsage.ContainsVar">
<severity>0</severity>
</rule>
<!--
There is a special internal error message produced by PHP_CodeSniffer
when it is unable to detect code in a file, possible due to
the use of short open tags even though php.ini disables them.
You can disable this message in the same way as sniff messages.
Again, the code here will be displayed in the PHP_CodeSniffer
output when using the -s command line argument while checking a file.
-->
<rule ref="Internal.NoCodeFound">
<severity>0</severity>
</rule>
<!--
You can hard-code ignore patterns for specific sniffs,
a feature not available on the command line. Please note that
all sniff-specific ignore patterns are checked using absolute paths.
The code here will hide all messages from the Squiz DoubleQuoteUsage
sniff for files that match either of the two exclude patterns.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz.Strings.DoubleQuoteUsage">
<exclude-pattern>*/tests/*</exclude-pattern>
<exclude-pattern>*/data/*</exclude-pattern>
</rule>
<!--
You can also be more specific and just exclude some messages.
Please note that all message-specific ignore patterns are
checked using absolute paths.
The code here will just hide the ContainsVar error generated by the
Squiz DoubleQuoteUsage sniff for files that match either of the two
exclude patterns.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz.Strings.DoubleQuoteUsage.ContainsVar">
<exclude-pattern>*/tests/*</exclude-pattern>
<exclude-pattern>*/data/*</exclude-pattern>
</rule>
<!--
You can hard-code include patterns for specific sniffs,
allowing you to only include sniffs when checking specific files.
Please note that all sniff-specific include patterns are checked using
absolute paths.
The code here will only run the Squiz DoubleQuoteUsage sniff for
files that match either of the two include patterns.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz.Strings.DoubleQuoteUsage">
<include-pattern>*/templates/*</include-pattern>
<include-pattern>*\.tpl$</include-pattern>
</rule>
<!--
As with exclude rules, you can be more specific and just include
some messages. Please note that all message-specific include patterns
are checked using absolute paths.
The code here will just show the ContainsVar error generated by the
Squiz DoubleQuoteUsage sniff for files that match either of the two
include patterns.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz.Strings.DoubleQuoteUsage.ContainsVar">
<include-pattern>*/templates/*</include-pattern>
<include-pattern>*\.tpl$</include-pattern>
</rule>
</ruleset>
All tags in a ruleset file, with the exception of ruleset
and description
, can be selectively applied when a specific tool is being run. The two tools that are available are phpcs
(the coding standards checker) and phpcbf
(the coding standards fixer). Restrictions are applied by using the phpcs-only
and phpcbf-only
tag attributes.
Setting the phpcs-only
attribute to true
will only apply the rule when the phpcs
tool is running. The rule will not be applied while the file is being fixed with the phpcbf
tool.
Setting the phpcbf-only
attribute to true
will only apply the rule when the phpcbf
tool is fixing a file. The rule will not be applied while the file is being checked with the phpcs
tool.
The following sample file shows a ruleset.xml file that makes use of selective rules. The file is designed for documentation purposes only and is not a working coding standard.
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<ruleset name="Selective Standard">
<!--
Use an external tool only when checking coding standards
and not while fixing a file.
-->
<config phpcs-only="true" name="zend_ca_path" value="/path/to/ZendCodeAnalyzer"/>
<!--
Exclude some files from being fixed.
-->
<exclude-pattern phpcbf-only="true">*/3rdparty/*</exclude-pattern>
<!--
Exclude some sniffs when fixing files, but allow them
to still report errors while checking files.
-->
<rule ref="Squiz">
<exclude phpcbf-only="true" name="Generic.WhiteSpace.ScopeIndent"/>
</rule>
<!--
Exclude some messages when fixing files, but allow them
to still report errors while checking files.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.Commenting.Todo.CommentFound">
<severity phpcbf-only="true">0</severity>
</rule>
<!--
Set different property values for fixing and checking.
-->
<rule ref="Generic.Files.LineLength">
<properties>
<property phpcs-only="true" name="lineLimit" value="80"/>
<property phpcbf-only="true" name="lineLimit" value="120"/>
</properties>
</rule>
</ruleset>
For everyone
Introduction
Requirements
Usage
Advanced Usage
Reporting
Configuration Options
Fixing Errors Automatically
FAQ
For coding standard creators
Annotated Ruleset
Customisable Sniff Properties
For sniff developers
Coding Standard Tutorial
Version 3.0 Upgrade Guide
Version 1.3.0 Upgrade Guide