Symfttpd is a command line tool to run a web server in your PHP project, aimed at lazy developers and sysadmins.
This version of symfttpd is under development, this documentation can be outdated or contain some errors.
spawn
will setup and start a web server (lighttpd or nginx) with a minimal
configuration to serve one PHP project. The server will not be run as
a separate user, which is ideal for developers; also, the server logs
will be written in the symfttpd's "log" directory and will include PHP errors.
genconf
will generate all the rules necessary to setup a vhost in lighttpd.
It leverages the include_shell
directive which means no endless
copy/pasting and easy updates (only restarting lighttpd is necessary).
Download the .phar
file.
Add Symfttpd as a requirement of your project with Composer:
{
…
"require-dev": {
"benjam1/symfttpd": "2.1.*@"
},
"config": {
"bin-dir": "bin/"
}
}
Then you can use Symfttpd running bin/symfttpd
.
You can run these commands to install symfttpd globally:
$ sudo wget https://github.com/downloads/benja-M-1/symfttpd/symfttpd.phar -O /usr/local/bin/symfttpd
$ sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/symfttpd
Clone this repository and checkout the latest tag.
benjamin:~/dev benjamin $ git clone git://github.com/benja-M-1/symfttpd.git
benjamin:~/dev benjamin $ cd symfttpd
benjamin:~/dev/symfttpd benjamin $ git checkout v2.0.0-dev
Install the vendors with composer
benjamin:~/dev/symfttpd benjamin $ curl -s http://getcomposer.org/installer | php
benjamin:~/dev/symfttpd benjamin $ php composer.phar install
Then compile symfttpd in your project to create an executable .phar
file
In order to compile you have to set the phar.readonly
setting to Off
in you php.ini file.
benjamin:~/dev/project benjamin $ php box.phar build
benjamin:~/dev/project benjamin $ php symfttpd.phar --help
Usage:
help [--xml] [command_name]
Arguments:
command The command to execute
command_name The command name (default: 'help')
Options:
--xml To output help as XML
--help (-h) Display this help message.
--quiet (-q) Do not output any message.
--verbose (-v) Increase verbosity of messages.
--version (-V) Display this application version.
--ansi Force ANSI output.
--no-ansi Disable ANSI output.
--no-interaction (-n) Do not ask any interactive question.
Help:
The help command displays help for a given command:
php symfttpd.phar help list
You can also output the help as XML by using the --xml option:
php symfttpd.phar help --xml list
First of all you need to configure symfttpd with a symfttpd.conf.php
file.
benjamin:~/dev/project benjamin $ php symfttpd.phar init
The init command is available since the version 2.1 of Symfttpd.
Symfttpd looks for the configuration file:
- in your home directory, this file must be named
.symfttpd.conf.php
- in the root directory of your project (or in config/ for a symfony 1.x project)
By default symfttpd read the configuration from its own symfttpd.conf.php
file.
The minimal information symfttpd needs is a project type and a project version.
<?php
// symfttpd.conf.php of a Symfony 2 project
$options['project_type'] = "symfony";
$options['project_version'] = "2";
This will tell Symfttpd to run a Lighttpd (using fastcgi) server in your Symfony 2 project.
You can check the reference for more options to configure.
If you don't want to configure a full-blown webserver, edit your host file, edit the configuration, have a web server running even when you don't need it, or deal with permissions, then this tool is for you.
After configuring symfttpd you only have to run the following:
benjamin:~/dev/project benjamin $ php symfttpd.phar spawn -t
It will display something like that:
Symfttpd - version v2.0.0-dev
lighttpd started on 127.0.0.1, port 4042.
Available applications:
http://127.0.0.1:4042/app.php
http://127.0.0.1:4042/app_dev.php
Press Ctrl+C to stop serving.
error: 2012-05-26 20:19:25: (log.c.166) server started
You can alter the default configuration of the server, by using the symfttpd.conf.php
mechanism. Check the reference for more options to configure.
--port=<port>
or-p<port>
: Use a different port (default is4042
) (useful for running multiple projects at the same time)--bind=<port>
or-b<ip>
: Listen on a specific IP (default is127.0.0.1
)--all
or-A
: Listen on all interfaces (overrides--bind
)--tail
or-t
: Display server logs in the console (like the UNIXtail
command would do)
If you don't want to copy/paste your server configs, handle regular expressions when you add files, or fight rewriting issues, then this tool is for you.
Typical Lighttpd config:
$HTTP["host"] == "example.com" {
include_shell "php /path/to/symfttpd.phar genconf -p /path/to/example.com/web"
}
or if you want a different default application:
$HTTP["host"] == "mobile.example.com" {
include_shell "php /path/to/symfttpd.phar genconf -p /path/to/example.com/web -d mobile"
}
type
The config file type (config, rules, all). (default: 'rules')--path (-p)
Path of the web directory (default: current directory)--output (-o)
Directly output the generated configuration.--port
The port to listen (default: 4042)--bind
The address to bind (default: '127.0.0.1')
lighttpd being pronounced lighty, I recommend symfy.
No, and it probably never will be.
Yes. I'd say you should, since the command line options of genconf
are
thought for that particular use. genconf
does not run symfony or any other
external files, nor writes anything anywhere, so it is very little risk.
No!
Yes, just add &
after your command.
php /path/to/symfttpd.phar spawn &
To stop a running symfttpd (backgrounding or not), just run:
php path/to/symfttpd.phar spawn --kill