LAMP
| Summary |
|---|
| This page explains the installation and configuration of a complete LAMP server. |
| Related |
| MariaDB |
| PhpMyAdmin |
| Adminer |
| Xampp |
| mod_perl |
LAMP refers to a common combination of software used in many web servers: Linux, Apache, MySQL/MariaDB, and PHP. This article describes how to set up the Apache HTTP Server on an Arch Linux system. It also tells you how to optionally install PHP and MariaDB and integrate these in the Apache server.
If you only need a web server for development and testing, Xampp might be a better and easier option.
Contents |
Installation
This document assumes you will install Apache, PHP and MariaDB together. If desired however, you may install Apache, PHP, and MariaDB separately and simply refer to the relevant sections below.
You can install apache, php, php-apache and mariadb from the official repositories.
Configuration
Apache
For security reasons, as soon as Apache is started by the root user (directly or via startup scripts) it switches to the UID/GID specified in /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf. The default is user http and it is created automatically during installation.
Change httpd.conf and optionally extra/httpd-default.conf to your liking and start the httpd daemon using systemd.
Apache should now be running. Test by visiting http://localhost/ in a web browser. It should display a simple Apache test page.
User directories
- User directories are available by default through http://localhost/~yourusername/ and show the contents of
~/public_html(this can be changed in/etc/httpd/conf/extra/httpd-userdir.conf).
- If you do not want user directories to be available on the web, comment out the following line in
/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf:
Include conf/extra/httpd-userdir.conf
- You must make sure that your home directory permissions are set properly so that Apache can get there. Your home directory and
~/public_html/must be executable for others ("rest of the world"). This seems to be enough:
$ chmod o+x ~ $ chmod o+x ~/public_html
- A more secure way to share your home folder with Apache is to add the http user to the group that owns your home folder. For example, if your home folder and other sub-folders in your home folder belong to group piter, all you have to do is following:
# usermod -aG piter http
or
# gpasswd -a http piter
- Of course, you have to give read and execute permissions on
~/,~/public_html, and all other sub-folders in~/public_htmlto the group members (group piter in our case). Do something like the following (modify the commands for your specific case):
$ chmod g+xr-w /home/yourusername $ chmod -R g+xr-w /home/yourusername/public_html
Restart httpd to apply any changes.
SSL
- Create a self-signed certificate (you can change the key size and the number of days of validity):
# cd /etc/httpd/conf # openssl genrsa -out server.key 2048 # chmod 600 server.key # openssl req -new -key server.key -out server.csr # openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in server.csr -signkey server.key -out server.crt
- Then, in
/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf, uncomment the line containing:
Include conf/extra/httpd-ssl.conf
Restart httpd to apply any changes.
Virtual Hosts
- If you want to have more than one host, uncomment the following line in
/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf:
Include conf/extra/httpd-vhosts.conf
- In
/etc/httpd/conf/extra/httpd-vhosts.confset your virtual hosts according the example, e.g.:
/etc/httpd/conf/extra/httpd-vhosts.conf
NameVirtualHost *:80 #this allows name based virtual hosts #this first virtualhost enables: http://127.0.0.1, or: http://localhost, #to still go to /srv/http/*index.html(otherwise it will 404_error). #the reason for this: once you tell httpd.conf to include extra/httpd-vhosts.conf, #ALL vhosts are handled in httpd-vhosts.conf(including the default one), # E.G. the default virtualhost in httpd.conf is not used and must be included here, #otherwise, only domainname1.dom & domainname2.dom will be accessible #from your web browser and NOT http://127.0.0.1, or: http://localhost, etc. # <VirtualHost *:80> DocumentRoot "/srv/http" ServerAdmin root@localhost ErrorLog "/var/log/httpd/127.0.0.1-error_log" CustomLog "/var/log/httpd/127.0.0.1-access_log" common <Directory /srv/http/> DirectoryIndex index.htm index.html AddHandler cgi-script .cgi .pl Options ExecCGI Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews +Includes AllowOverride None Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory> </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:80> ServerAdmin your@domainname1.dom DocumentRoot "/home/username/yoursites/domainname1.dom/www" ServerName domainname1.dom ServerAlias domainname1.dom <Directory /home/username/yoursites/domainname1.dom/www/> DirectoryIndex index.htm index.html AddHandler cgi-script .cgi .pl Options ExecCGI Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews +Includes AllowOverride None Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory> </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:80> ServerAdmin your@domainname2.dom DocumentRoot "/home/username/yoursites/domainname2.dom/www" ServerName domainname2.dom ServerAlias domainname2.dom <Directory /home/username/yoursites/domainname2.dom/www/> DirectoryIndex index.htm index.html AddHandler cgi-script .cgi .pl Options ExecCGI Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews +Includes AllowOverride None Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory> </VirtualHost>
- Add your virtual host names to your
/etc/hostsfile (not necessary if a DNS server is serving these domains already, but will not hurt to do it anyway):
127.0.0.1 domainname1.dom 127.0.0.1 domainname2.dom
Restart httpd to apply any changes.
- If you setup your virtual hosts to be in your user directory, sometimes it interferes with Apache's
Userdirsettings. To avoid problems disableUserdirby comment the following line in:
#Include conf/extra/httpd-userdir.conf
- As said above, ensure that you have the proper permissions:
# chmod 0775 /home/yourusername/
- If you have a huge amount of virtual hosts, you may want to easily disable and enable them. It is recommended to create one configuration file per virtual host and store them all in one folder, eg:
/etc/httpd/conf/vhosts.
- First create the folder:
# mkdir /etc/httpd/conf/vhosts
- Then place the single configuration files in it:
# nano /etc/httpd/conf/vhosts/domainname1.dom # nano /etc/httpd/conf/vhosts/domainname2.dom ...
- In the last step,
Includethe single configurations in your/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf:
#Enabled Vhosts: Include conf/vhosts/domainname1.dom Include conf/vhosts/domainname2.dom
- You can enable and disable single virtual hosts by commenting or uncommenting them.
Advanced Options
These options in /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf might be interesting for you.
# Listen 80
- This is the port Apache will listen to. For Internet-access with router, you have to forward the port.
If you setup Apache for local development you may want it to be only accessible from your computer. Then change this line to:
# Listen 127.0.0.1:80
- This is the admin's email address which can be found on e.g. error pages:
# ServerAdmin you@example.com
- This is the directory where you should put your web pages:
# DocumentRoot "/srv/http"
Change it, if you want to, but do not forget to also change
<Directory "/srv/http">
to whatever you changed your DocumentRoot too, or you will likely get a 403 Error (lack of privileges) when you try to access the new document root. Do not forget to change the Deny from all line, otherwise you will get a 403 Error.
# AllowOverride None
- This directive in
<Directory>sections causes Apache to completely ignore.htaccessfiles. If you intend to usemod_rewriteor other settings in.htaccessfiles, you can allow which directives declared in that file can override server configuration. For more info refer to the Apache documentation.
- More settings in
/etc/httpd/conf/extra/httpd-default.conf:
- To turn off your server's signature:
ServerSignature Off
- To hide server information like Apache and PHP versions:
ServerTokens Prod
PHP
- To enable PHP, add these lines to
/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf:
- Place this in the
LoadModulelist anywhere afterLoadModule dir_module modules/mod_dir.so:
LoadModule php5_module modules/libphp5.so
- Place this at the end of the
Includelist:
Include conf/extra/php5_module.conf
- Make sure that the following line is uncommented in the
<IfModule mime_module>section:
TypesConfig conf/mime.types
- Uncomment the following line (optional):
MIMEMagicFile conf/magic
- Add this line in
/etc/httpd/conf/mime.types:
application/x-httpd-php php php5
- If your
DocumentRootis not/srv/http, add it toopen_basedirin/etc/php/php.inias such:
open_basedir=/srv/http/:/home/:/tmp/:/usr/share/pear/:/path/to/documentroot
- Restart the httpd daemon.
- To test whether PHP was correctly configured: create a file called
test.phpin your ApacheDocumentRootdirectory (e.g./srv/http/or~/public_html) and inside it put:
<?php phpinfo(); ?>
- To see if it works go to: http://localhost/test.php or http://localhost/~myname/test.php
- If the PHP code is not executed (you see plain text in
test.php), check that you have addedIncludesto theOptionsline for your root directory in/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf. Moreover, check thatTypesConfig conf/mime.typesis uncommented in the <IfModule mime_module> section, you may also try adding the following to the<IfModule mime_module>inhttpd.conf:
AddHandler application/x-httpd-php .php
Advanced options
- It is recommended to set your timezone (list of timezones) in
/etc/php/php.inilike so:
date.timezone = Europe/Berlin
- If you want to display errors to debug your PHP code, change
display_errorstoOnin/etc/php/php.ini:
display_errors=On
- If you want the
libGDmodule, install php-gd and uncommentextension=gd.soin/etc/php/php.ini:
extension=gd.so
- If you want the
mcryptmodule, install php-mcrypt and uncommentextension=mcrypt.soin/etc/php/php.ini:
extension=mcrypt.so
- Remember to add a file handler for
.phtml, if you need it, in/etc/httpd/conf/extra/php5_module.conf:
DirectoryIndex index.php index.phtml index.html
Using php5 with apache2-mpm-worker and mod_fcgid
- Uncomment following in
/etc/conf.d/apache:
HTTPD=/usr/bin/httpd.worker
- Uncomment following in
/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf:
Include conf/extra/httpd-mpm.conf
- Install the mod_fcgid and php-cgi packages from the official repositories.
- Create
/etc/httpd/conf/extra/php5_fcgid.confwith following content:
/etc/httpd/conf/extra/php5_fcgid.conf
# Required modules: fcgid_module
<IfModule fcgid_module>
AddHandler php-fcgid .php
AddType application/x-httpd-php .php
Action php-fcgid /fcgid-bin/php-fcgid-wrapper
ScriptAlias /fcgid-bin/ /srv/http/fcgid-bin/
SocketPath /var/run/httpd/fcgidsock
SharememPath /var/run/httpd/fcgid_shm
# If you don't allow bigger requests many applications may fail (such as WordPress login)
FcgidMaxRequestLen 536870912
PHP_Fix_Pathinfo_Enable 1
# Path to php.ini – defaults to /etc/phpX/cgi
DefaultInitEnv PHPRC=/etc/php/
# Number of PHP childs that will be launched. Leave undefined to let PHP decide.
#DefaultInitEnv PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN 3
# Maximum requests before a process is stopped and a new one is launched
#DefaultInitEnv PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS 5000
<Location /fcgid-bin/>
SetHandler fcgid-script
Options +ExecCGI
</Location>
</IfModule>
- Create the needed directory and symlink it for the PHP wrapper:
# mkdir /srv/http/fcgid-bin # ln -s /usr/bin/php-cgi /srv/http/fcgid-bin/php-fcgid-wrapper
- Edit
/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf:
#LoadModule php5_module modules/libphp5.so LoadModule fcgid_module modules/mod_fcgid.so Include conf/extra/php5_fcgid.conf
- Make sure
/etc/php/php.inihas the directive enabled:
cgi.fix_pathinfo=1
and restart httpd.
MariaDB
- Configure MySQL/MariaDB as described in MariaDB.
- Uncomment at least one of the following lines in
/etc/php/php.ini:
extension=pdo_mysql.so extension=mysqli.so extension=mysql.so
- You can add minor privileged MySQL users for your web scripts. You might also want to edit
/etc/mysql/my.cnfand uncomment theskip-networkingline so the MySQL server is only accessible by the localhost. You have to restart MySQL for changes to take effect.
- Restart the httpd daemon.