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documentation > PHP Setup

PHP Setup

Friday, 27 July 2012 by Bill Welliver

1. Introduction 

There are two recommended ways to run PHP with Caudium. Each way has its advantages and drawbacks.

PHP can be run: 
  • As a CGI, using Caudium Uniscript module.
  • As a FastCGI, using Caudium FastUniscript module.

Both methods are similar, simply compile your PHP with support for FastCGI to use the second option and replace FastUniscript in the instructions.  A third method using PHP as a module is not supported anymore due to PHP bugs. Read further for more information

2. PHP using Uniscript

2.1. Introduction to Uniscript Mode


Uniscript mode is in fact using PHP in CGI mode. Caudium has a module named Universal Script Parser that allows you to wrap any special extensions inside a webserver to a CGI. Eg .php to /usr/local/bin/php. This is the way PHP will be run.

2.2. Drawbacks

  • A PHP interpreter is forked on each page called. This can be ressource consuming.
  • Some PHP options and some security options must be considered. See the PHP manual about PHP install as a CGI manual.

2.3. Benefits

  • Since it is in a CGI, when PHP crashes Caudium doesn't :).
  • You can run PHP as a user different than Caudium.
  • You can give specify limitation on the size of processes and resources usage.
  • You can have several PHP interpreters with different php.ini files and compilations.

2.4. Software requirements

Before installing PHP4 support as a CGI for Caudium, you will need the following:
  • An OS supported by PHP4 and Caudium.
  • Caudium installed (you don't need Pike development headers).
  • PHP4 sources (we recommend PHP 4.3.2RC2)
  • An ANSI C compiler and all libraries needed for compiling PHP.

We assume that you have successfully installed Pike and Caudium on your machine.

2.5. Compilation and installation of PHP


NOTE: in this example, we assume that we will install all PHP in /usr/local/php-4.3.2RC-cgi/.
Extract PHP4 source somewhere and do the following :

 
 $ cd php-4.3.2RC2
 $ ./configure --prefix=/usr/local/php-4.3.2RC-cgi/ --enable-force-cgi-redirect \
               --enable-discard-path --enable-fastcgi --without-pear --enable-safe-mode \
               --enable-sigchild --enable-magic-quotes --disable-rpath \
               --with-other-php-options
 $ make
Now the PHP interpreter is fully compiled and can be installed.

 $ make install


2.6. Configuring Caudium

Log into the graphical configuration interface and go to the virtual server where you want to add PHP support.  

Click on "Add Module", locate and add PATH_INFO support module and Universal Script parser module. 

Then configure the Universal Script Parser module with the following options :

  • interpreter path : /usr/local/php-4.3.2RC-cgi/bin/php or the place where where you have installed php.  
  • script extensions : php or comma separated extensions you'd like to handle with that php cgi.  

Note that you can configure the Run script as option if you want to run php with a different user than default:nobody. 

Then create a test page with :

<? phpinfo(); ?>

  
Then you will get the PHP Info page.

2.7. Hints

To use sessions in CGI mode you will need to save them on disk instead of memory. To do that, you will need to change/add option in you /usr/local/php-4.3.2RC-cgi/lib/php.ini:
 
[Session]
; Handler used to store/retrieve data.
session.save_handler = files

; Argument passed to save_handler.  In the case of files, this is the path
; where data files are stored. Note: Windows users have to change this 
; variable in order to use PHP's session functions.
; As of PHP 4.0.1, you can define the path as:
;     session.save_path = "N;/path"
; where N is an integer.  Instead of storing all the session files in 
; /path, what this will do is use subdirectories N-levels deep, and 
; store the session data in those directories.  This is useful if you 
; or your OS have problems with lots of files in one directory, and is 
; a more efficient layout for servers that handle lots of sessions.
; NOTE 1: PHP will not create this directory structure automatically.
;         You can use the script in the ext/session dir for that purpose.
; NOTE 2: See the section on garbage collection below if you choose to
;         use subdirectories for session storage
session.save_path = /var/sessions

; Whether to use cookies.
session.use_cookies = 1

; This option enables administrators to make their users invulnerable to
; attacks which involve passing session ids in URLs; defaults to 0.
; session.use_only_cookies = 1

; Name of the session (used as cookie name).
session.name = PHPSESSID

; Initialize session on request startup.
session.auto_start = 0

; Lifetime in seconds of cookie or, if 0, until browser is restarted.
session.cookie_lifetime = 0

; The path for which the cookie is valid.
session.cookie_path = /

; The domain for which the cookie is valid.
session.cookie_domain =

; Handler used to serialize data.  php is the standard serializer of PHP.
session.serialize_handler = php

; Define the probability that the 'garbage collection' process is started
; on every session initialization.
; The probability is calculated by using gc_probability/gc_divisor,
; e.g. 1/100 means there is a 1% chance that the GC process starts
; on each request.

session.gc_probability = 1
session.gc_divisor     = 100

; After this number of seconds, stored data will be seen as 'garbage' and
; cleaned up by the garbage collection process.
session.gc_maxlifetime = 1440

; NOTE: If you are using the subdirectory option for storing session files
;       (see session.save_path above), then garbage collection does *not*
;       happen automatically.  You will need to do your own garbage 
;       collection through a shell script, cron entry, or some other method. 
;       For example, the following script would is the equivalent of
;       setting session.gc_maxlifetime to 1440 (1440 seconds = 24 minutes):
;          cd /path/to/sessions; find -cmin +24 | xargs rm
; PHP 4.2 and less have an undocumented feature/bug that allows you to
; to initialize a session variable in the global scope, albeit register_globals
; is disabled.  PHP 4.3 and later will warn you, if this feature is used.
; You can disable the feature and the warning seperately. At this time,
; the warning is only displayed, if bug_compat_42 is enabled.

session.bug_compat_42 = 1
session.bug_compat_warn = 1

; Check HTTP Referer to invalidate externally stored URLs containing ids.
; HTTP_REFERER has to contain this substring for the session to be
; considered as valid.
session.referer_check =

; How many bytes to read from the file.
session.entropy_length = 12

; Specified here to create the session id.
session.entropy_file = /dev/urandom

;session.entropy_length = 16

;session.entropy_file = /dev/urandom
; Set to {nocache,private,public,} to determine HTTP caching aspects
; or leave this empty to avoid sending anti-caching headers.
session.cache_limiter = nocache

; Document expires after n minutes.
session.cache_expire = 180

; trans sid support is disabled by default.
; Use of trans sid may risk your users security. 
; Use this option with caution.
; - User may send URL contains active session ID
;   to other person via. email/irc/etc.
; - URL that contains active session ID may be stored
;   in publically accessible computer.
; - User may access your site with the same session ID
;   always using URL stored in browser's history or bookmarks.
session.use_trans_sid = 0

Please check your PHP manual for more information about this parameters.

3. PHP as a module (not supported anymore)

Some documentation (eg the one from PHP) may give some instructions for building and using PHP as a module.   However, embedded PHP does not work well in a threaded environment. It neither work on Apache 2.0 and this won't be fixed in the forseeable future (a few years at least according to Rasmus LERDORF)   While this may behave correctly while running Caudium unthreaded, this usage is not supported by the Caudium group anymore and won't be until this issue is not fixed on the PHP side.

Please use the CGI/FastCGI modes instead. 

4. Conclusion

At the time of writing this document, the most stable way to use PHP is the CGI one.  It is up to you to decide between stability and speed. But the difference between them is not so big, only stability may be an issue.

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