I followed the documentation on https://getcomposer.org/doc/00-intro.md#globally to install composer globally on arch linux. When I do composer self-update, I get this message:
[ErrorException]
rename(/home/hannes/.composer/cache/composer-temp.phar,/usr/local/bin/composer): Permission denied
The permissions in /usr/local/bin/ (I changed them to 777, but it did not help):
-rwxrwxrwx 1 hannes users 1104202 30. Mai 18:07 composer
In my home directory I did this:
sudo chmod -R 777 .composer/
In /etc/php/php.ini, the open_basedir looks so:
open_basedir = /srv/http/:/home/:/tmp/:/usr/share/pear/:/usr/share/webapps/:/usr/local/bin/
I also tried sudo composer self-update but it did not work as well and is possibly not the right way. (?). What else could I try to make this work?
On Ubuntu server >= 16.04
FIRST
sudo rm /usr/local/bin/composer AND
cd ~/.cache/composer chmod 755 composer-temp.phar sudo mv composer-temp.phar /usr/local/bin/composer
this might be the case if you have downloaded composer.phar directly ,
but not by running php composer-setup.php
make composer.phar executable with following command before moving it to /usr/local/bin/composer or after moving
sudo chmod 755 composer.phar
composer-setup.php will make this change for us by default
You should check the permissions of the directory /usr/local/bin/, not just the file within. The process has to write both, the file and into the directory which both must be granted.
Apart from that, a general hint: do not always set everything to 777. There is no reason for that and it makes your system vulnerable.
According to the line you posted in the last comment the directory is currently writeable only for the root user himself. That would explain the error you get. You should not make your own user account the owner, Linux systems are multi user environments. Instead think about one of these approaches:
composer to the group root (a user account can belong to several groups) and make the directory group writeablesudo utility to install and update the composer utilityThe last option is the typically chosen and preferred one. It leaves permissions as they are (conservative) and only uses raised privileges for system maintenance jobs like installation and upgrade.
Use sudo command for any command which writes to root files of folder. It worked for me.
use sudo "your command"
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