nabbisen
Posted on February 18, 2022
Summary
PHP-FPM, PHP FastCGI Process Manager, is a part of PHP package in OpenBSD packages nowadays.
So installing PHP (php-?.?
due to the version) comes with php??_fpm
automatically 💃
This post will show you how to set it up.
Environment
- OS: OpenBSD 7.0 amd64
- PHP: 8.0
Tutorial
Installation
The first step is to install the PHP package:
$ doas pkg_add php
Ambiguous: choose package for php
a 0: <None>
1: php-7.3.33
2: php-7.4.27
3: php-8.0.14
Your choice:
I chose "3" because it's longer supported term due to each support term of the PHP versions.
The output was:
php-8.0.14:femail-1.0p1: ok
php-8.0.14:femail-chroot-1.0p3: ok
php-8.0.14:argon2-20190702: ok
php-8.0.14:libsodium-1.0.18p1: ok
php-8.0.14:libxml-2.9.12: ok
php-8.0.14:oniguruma-6.9.7.1: ok
php-8.0.14: ok
Running tags: ok
The following new rcscripts were installed: /etc/rc.d/php80_fpm
See rcctl(8) for details.
New and changed readme(s):
/usr/local/share/doc/pkg-readmes/femail-chroot
/usr/local/share/doc/pkg-readmes/php-8.0
Then these directories/files were made:
$ ls /etc/php*
/etc/php-8.0.ini /etc/php-fpm.conf
/etc/php-8.0:
/etc/php-8.0.sample:
opcache.ini
/etc/php-fpm.d:
Well, the .ini
file(s) in /etc/php-8.0.sample
are PHP extensions.
According to necessity, copy each of them to /etc/php-8.0/
to activate the extensions:
$ doas ln -sf /etc/php-8.0.sample/%target-ini-files% /etc/php-8.0/
Also edit /etc/php-8.0.ini
as needed.
For example:
; Maximum allowed size for uploaded files.
; http://php.net/upload-max-filesize
- upload_max_filesize = 2M
+ upload_max_filesize = 5M
Besides, the manual is also installed as /usr/local/share/doc/pkg-readmes/php-8.0
which declares:
The main OpenBSD php packages include php-fpm, FastCGI Process Manager.
This manages pools of FastCGI processes: starts/restarts them and
maintains a minimum and maximum number of spare processes as
configured. You can use rcctl(8) to enable php-fpm at boot,
and start it at runtime:rcctl enable php80_fpm
rcctl start php80_fpm
OK. We're ready.
Let's start daemon:
$ doas rcctl enable php80_fpm
It appended a line to /etc/rc.conf.local:
+ pkg_scripts=php80_fpm
OK. It's time to start the daemon:
$ doas rcctl start php80_fpm
php80_fpm(ok)
Usage
Next, we need to prepare a web server.
Let's edit /etc/httpd.conf
to add fastcgi socket
in SERVERS sections like this:
types {
include "/usr/share/misc/mime.types"
}
ext_addr="egress"
server "default" {
listen on $ext_addr port 80
root "/htdocs"
directory index index.php
location "/*.php" {
fastcgi socket "/run/php-fpm.sock"
}
location "/*.php[/?]*" {
fastcgi socket "/run/php-fpm.sock"
}
}
Note that chroot
works in this context.
Therefore, fastcgi socket "/run/php-fpm.sock"
in /etc/httpd.conf
actually means fastcgi socket "/var/www/run/php-fpm.sock"
.
This is the same to that root "/htdocs"
means "/var/www/htdocs"
.
Testing
Let's make /var/www/htdocs/index.php
for testing like this:
# echo "<?php phpinfo(); ?>" > /var/www/htdocs/index.php
# # delete the file above afterwards as needed
Then browsing your host will show you the whole phpinfo!
Happy serving 💃
Posted on February 18, 2022
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