Rector now supports upgrades from PHP 5.3 to 8.1 and major open-source projects like [Symfony](https://github.com/rectorphp/rector-symfony), [PHPUnit](https://github.com/rectorphp/rector-phpunit), and [Doctrine](https://github.com/rectorphp/rector-doctrine). Do you want to **be constantly on the latest PHP and Framework without effort**?
Do you have code quality you need, but struggle to keep it with new developers in your team? Do you want to see smart code-reviews even when every senior developers sleeps?
Are you curious, how Rector works internally, how to create your own rules and test them and why Rector was born?
Read [Rector - The Power of Automated Refactoring](https://leanpub.com/rector-the-power-of-automated-refactoring) that will take you step by step through the Rector setup and how to create your own rules.
Rector is a tool that [we develop](https://getrector.org/) and share for free, so anyone can automate their refactoring. But not everyone has dozens of hours to understand complexity of abstract-syntax-tree in their own time. **That's why we provide commercial support - to save your time**.
Would you like to apply Rector on your code base but don't have time for the struggle with your project? [Hire us](https://getrector.org/contact) to get there faster.
You can use `--debug` option, that will print nested exceptions output:
```bash
vendor/bin/rector process src/Controller --dry-run --debug
```
Or with Xdebug:
1. Make sure [Xdebug](https://xdebug.org/) is installed and configured
2. Add `--xdebug` option when running Rector
```bash
vendor/bin/rector process src/Controller --dry-run --xdebug
```
## Known Drawbacks
### How to Apply Coding Standards?
Rector uses [nikic/php-parser](https://github.com/nikic/PHP-Parser/), built on technology called an *abstract syntax tree* (AST). An AST doesn't know about spaces and when written to a file it produces poorly formatted code in both PHP and docblock annotations. **That's why your project needs to have a coding standard tool** and a set of formatting rules, so it can make Rector's output code nice and shiny again.