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TitaniumPHP is a flexible PHP console environment intended to run within your project context - similar to Django's built in shell utility.

Things you can do with TitaniumPHP

  • Test code
  • Run cron jobs
  • Database versioning
  • Create custom functions
  • Manage your code
  • Test environments
  • Create command line apps with ease
  • Test databases
  • Debug performance issues
  • Reflection
  • etc.

Getting started

  1. Download Titanium
  2. Unzip it and copy the directory into your PHP project directory root.

Then open your terminal and do the following:

> cd [titanium_directory]
> chmod a+x shell.php
> php shell.php
OR
> ./shell.php with chmod a+x permissions
OR 
./shell.php [command] [param1] [param2] [param3]...etc

Titanium allows you to include your project files and interact with your code via the command line and Titanium custom functions.

Creating custom functions

User defined functions are the backbone of Titanium, we've left it up to you to decide and build the functions you need.

Functions can be thought of as plugins that extend the base functionality of Titanium.

To create your own function, open up the <titanium>/functions directory and duplicate the fn.help.php file and rename to what ever you want (no spaces). This will give you a simple function template to start from.

Open your new file and look for: //p- %^help$%i

This is a regular expression that's used by the console to determine what function to run. When Titanium loads, it looks for
patterns and cache's them internally.

Any named matching groups will be passed as parameters to your
custom function.

Change the 'help' part to anything you want to use to access your function from the TitaniumPHP command line.

Next, look for fn_help($q, $matches, $params). Replace 'help' with the same name you used for your command pattern, remember to replace spaces with underscores.

Titanium uses static methods internally, this means that you can use any of the core methods inside your custom functions.

- Output::write($text, $color = "normal", $newline = false, $newlinecount = 1);
- Template::render($filename, $data = NULL);

Your custom function files should look like the following:

// Filename: fn.test.php	

//p- %^test$%i

/**
 * Test template
 *
 * @param string $q
 * @param array $matches
 * @param array $params
 */
 function fn_test($q, $matches, $params) 
 {
   // Put your code here. 
 }

Creating custom function templates

If you need your custom functions to output formatted data to the command line, you can create a custom template in <titanium>/templates/functions/.

Titanium uses the Savant3 template engine to render output, so familiarize yourself with it - Savant3

You output your template content to the CLI using:

Output::write(Template::render('functions/[your template name].tpl.php'), false, true);

You can assigned variables and other data to use in your template by adding a second parameter to the static render() method, like this:

$data = array(
 'name'    => 'Sean Nieuwoudt',
 'company' => 'Wixel.net',
 'other'   => array(1,2,4,5,6,7)
);

Output::write(Template::render('functions/[your template name].tpl.php', $data), false, true);

TODO

  • Add config loader for user created config files
  • Core database classes supporting PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite
  • Ability to use config tokens in function names & arguments
  • Replace static help.tpl.php with dynamically generated content
  • Add events & event hooks to the framework
  • Custom function to list all available configs & values
  • Add HTTP API specific testing core class and interacting with HTTP based services
  • Logger class with multiple writers

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An PHP REPL environment for testing, managing & interacting with your PHP applications

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