Ansible Role - PHP
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Ansible Role: PHP

Build Status

Installs PHP on RedHat/CentOS and Debian/Ubuntu servers.

Requirements

Must be running a separate web server, such as Nginx or Apache.

Role Variables

Available variables are listed below, along with default values (see defaults/main.yml):

php_packages: []

A list of the PHP packages to install (OS-specific by default). You'll likely want to install common packages like php, php-cli, php-devel and php-pdo, and you can add in whatever other packages you'd like (for example, php-gd for image manipulation, or php-ldap if you need to connect to an LDAP server for authentication).

php_enable_webserver: true

If your usage of PHP is tied to a web server (e.g. Apache or Nginx), leave this default value. If you are using PHP server-side or to run some small application, set this value to false so this role doesn't attempt to interact with a web server.

php_webserver_daemon: "httpd"

The default values for the HTTP server deamon are httpd (used by Apache) for RedHat/CentOS, or apache2 (also used by Apache) for Debian/Ubuntu. If you are running another webserver (for example, nginx), change this value to the name of the daemon under which the webserver runs.

php_enablerepo: ""

(RedHat/CentOS only) If you have enabled any additional repositories (might I suggest geerlingguy.repo-epel or geerlingguy.repo-remi), those repositories can be listed under this variable (e.g. remi,epel). This can be handy, as an example, if you want to install the latest version of PHP 5.4, which is in the Remi repository.

PHP-FPM

PHP-FPM is a simple and robust FastCGI Process Manager for PHP. It can dramatically ease scaling of PHP apps and is the normal way of running PHP-based sites and apps when using a webserver like Nginx (though it can be used with other webservers just as easily).

When using this role with PHP running as php-fpm instead of as a process inside a webserver (e.g. Apache's mod_php), you need to set the following variable to true:

php_enable_php_fpm: false

You will also need to override the default php_packages list and add php-fpm (RedHat/CentOS) or php5-fpm (Debian/Ubuntu) to the list.

This role does not manage fpm-specific www pool configuration (found in /etc/php-fpm.d/www.conf on RedHat/CentOS and /etc/php5/fpm/pool.d/www.conf on Debian/Ubuntu), but rather allows you to manage those files on your own. If you change that file, remember to notify the restart php-fpm handler so PHP picks up the new settings once in place. Settings like pm.max_children and other pm.* settings can have a dramatic impact on server performance, and should be tuned specifically for each application and server configuration.

php.ini settings

php_use_managed_ini: true

By default, all the extra defaults below are applied through the php.ini included with this role. You can self-manage your php.ini file (if you need more flexility in its configuration) by setting this to false (in which case all the below variables will be ignored).

php_memory_limit: "256M"
php_max_execution_time: "60"
php_realpath_cache_size: "32K"
php_upload_max_filesize: "64M"
php_post_max_size: "32M"
php_date_timezone: "America/Chicago"
php_sendmail_path: "/usr/sbin/sendmail -t -i"
php_short_open_tag: false
php_error_reporting: "E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED & ~E_STRICT"
php_display_errors: "Off"
php_display_startup_errors: "On"

Various defaults for PHP. Only used if php_use_managed_ini is set to true.

php_enable_apc: true

Whether to enable APC. Other APC variables will be ineffective if this is set to false.

php_apc_enabled_in_ini: false

When installing APC, depending on the system and whether running PHP as a webserver module or standalone via php-fpm, you might need the line extension=apc.so in apc.ini. If you need that line added (e.g. you're running php-fpm), set this variable to true.

php_apc_cache_by_default: "1"
php_apc_shm_size: "96M"
php_apc_stat: "1"
php_apc_enable_cli: "0"

APC ini directives that are often customized on a system. Set php_apc_cache_by_default to 0 to disable APC by default (so you could enable it on a host-by-host basis). Set the php_apc_shm_size so it will hold all your application code in memory with a little overhead (fragmentation or APC running out of memory will slow down PHP dramatically).

Ensuring APC is installed

If you use APC, you will need to make sure APC is installed (it is installed by default, but if you customize the php_packages list, you need to include APC in the list):

  • On RHEL/CentOS systems: Make sure php-pecl-apc is in the list of php_packages.
  • On Debian/Ubuntu systems: Make sure php-apc is in the list of php_packages.

You can also install APC via pecl, but it's simpler to manage the installation with the system's package manager.

Dependencies

None.

Example Playbook

- hosts: webservers
  vars_files:
    - vars/main.yml
  roles:
    - { role: geerlingguy.php }

Inside vars/main.yml:

php_memory_limit: "128M"
php_max_execution_time: "90"
php_upload_max_filesize: "256M"
php_packages:
  - php
  - php-cli
  - php-common
  - php-devel
  - php-gd
  - php-mbstring
  - php-pdo
  - php-pecl-apc
  - php-xml
  ...

TODO

  • Make role more flexible, allowing APC to be excluded from php_packages list.
  • Use lineinfile rather than templates to make configuration changes.

License

MIT / BSD

Author Information

This role was created in 2014 by Jeff Geerling, author of Ansible for DevOps.