A buildpack to deploy PHP applications to Cloud Foundry based systems, such as a cloud provider or your own instance.
Official buildpack documentation can be found here: php buildpack docs.
-
Make sure you have fetched submodules
git submodule update --init
-
Get latest buildpack dependencies
BUNDLE_GEMFILE=cf.Gemfile bundle
-
Build the buildpack
BUNDLE_GEMFILE=cf.Gemfile bundle exec buildpack-packager [ --uncached | --cached ] [ --any-stack | --stack=STACK ]
-
Use in Cloud Foundry
Upload the buildpack to your Cloud Foundry instance and optionally specify it by name
cf create-buildpack custom_php_buildpack php_buildpack-cached-custom.zip 1 cf push my_app -b custom_php_buildpack
Find our guidelines here.
Buildpacks use the Cutlass framework for running integration tests.
To run integration tests, run the following command:
./script/integration
To run unit tests, run the following command:
./script/unit
- PyEnv - This will allow you to easily install Python 2.6.6, which is the same version available through the staging environment of CloudFoundry.
- virtualenv & pip - The buildpack uses virtualenv and pip to setup the required packages. These are used by the unit test and not required by the buildpack itself.
git clone https://github.com/cloudfoundry/php-buildpack
cd php-buildpack
python -V # should report 2.6.6, if not fix PyEnv before creating the virtualenv
virtualenv `pwd`/env
. ./env/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt
The project is broken down into the following directories:
bin
contains executable scripts, includingcompile
,release
anddetect
defaults
contains the default configurationdocs
contains project documentationextensions
contains non-core extensionsenv
virtualenv environmentlib
contains core extensions, helper code and the buildpack utilsscripts
contains the Python scripts that run on compile, release and detecttests
contains test scripts and test datarun_tests.sh
a convenience script for running the full suite of tests
The easiest way to understand the buildpack is to trace the flow of the scripts. The buildpack system calls the compile
, release
and detect
scripts provided by the buildpack. These are located under the bin
directory and are generic. They simply redirect to the corresponding Python script under the scripts
directory.
Of these, the detect
and release
scripts are straightforward, providing the minimal functionality required by a buildpack. The compile
script is more complicated but works like this.
- load configuration
- setup the
WEBDIR
directory - install the buildpack utils and the core extensions (HTTPD, Nginx & PHP)
- install other extensions
- install the
rewrite
andstart
scripts - setup the runtime environment and process manager
- generate a startup.sh script
The buildpack relies heavily on extensions. An extension is simply a set of Python methods that will get called at various times during the staging process.
Included non-core extensions:
composer
- Downloads, installs and runs Composerdynatrace
- Downloads and configures Dynatrace OneAgent- Looks for a bound service with name
dynatrace
and valuecredentials
with sub-keysapiurl
environmentid
apitoken
- Looks for a bound service with name
geoip
- Configures geoip & optionally downloads geoip databases- Looks for a bound service with name
geoip-service
and valuecredentials
with sub-keysusername
license
products
- Looks for a bound service with name
newrelic
- Downloads, installs and configures the NewRelic agent for PHPsession
- Configures PHP to store session information in a bound Redis or Memcached service instance
In general, you shouldn't need to modify the buildpack itself. Instead creating your own extension should be the way to go.
To create an extension, simply create a folder. The name of the folder will be the name of the extension. Inside that folder, create a file called extension.py
. That file will contain your code. Inside that file, put your extension methods and any additional required code.
It's not necessary to fork the buildpack to add extensions for your app. The buildpack will notice and use extensions if you place them in a .extensions
folder at your application root. See the extensions directory in the cf-ex-wordpress
example for a sample.
Here is an explanation of the methods offered to an extension developer. All of them are optional and if a method is not implemented, it is simply skipped.
def configure(ctx):
pass
The configure
method gives extension authors a chance to adjust the configuration of the buildpack prior to any extensions running. The method is called very early on in the lifecycle of the buildpack, so keep this in mind when using this method. The purpose of this method is to allow an extension author the opportunity to modify the configuration for PHP, the web server or another extension prior to those components being installed.
An example of when to use this method would be to adjust the list of PHP extensions that are going to be installed.
The method takes one argument, which is the buildpack context. You can edit the context to update the state of the buildpack. Return value is ignore / not necessary.
def preprocess_commands(ctx):
return ()
The preprocess_commands
method gives extension authors the ability to contribute a list of commands that should be run prior to the services. These commands are run in the execution environment, not the staging environment and should execute and complete quickly. The purpose of these commands is to give extension authors the chance to run any last-minute code to adjust to the environment.
As an example, this is used by the core extensions rewrite configuration files with information that is specific to the runtime environment.
The method takes the context as an argument and should return a tuple of tuples (i.e. list of commands to run).
def service_commands(ctx):
return {}
The service_commands
method gives extension authors the ability to contribute a set of services that need to be run. These commands are run and should continue to run. If any service exits, the process manager will halt all of the other services and the application will be restarted by Cloud Foundry.
The method takes the context as an argument and should return a dictionary of services to run. The key should be the service name and the value should be a tuple which is the command and arguments.
def service_environment(ctx):
return {}
The service_environment
method gives extension authors the ability to contribute environment variables that will be set and available to the services.
The method takes the buildpack context as its argument and should return a dictionary of the environment variables to be added to the environment where services (see service_commands
) are executed.
The key should be the variable name and the value should be the value. The value can either be a string, in which case the environment variable will be set with the value of the string or it can be a list.
If it's a list, the contents will be combined into a string and separated by the path separation character (i.e. ':' on Unix / Linux or ';' on Windows). Keys that are set multiple times by the same or different extensions are automatically combined into one environment variable using the same path separation character. This is helpful when two extensions both want to contribute to the same variable, for example LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
Please note that environment variables are not evaluated as they are set. This would not work because they are set in the staging environment which is different than the execution environment. This means you cannot do things like PATH=$PATH:/new/path
or NEWPATH=$HOME/some/path
. To work around this, the buildpack will rewrite the environment variable file before it's processed. This process will replace any @<env-var>
markers with the value of the environment variable from the execution environment. Thus if you do PATH=@PATH:/new/path
or NEWPATH=@HOME/some/path
, the service end up with a correctly set PATH
or NEWPATH
.
def compile(install):
return 0
The compile
method is the main method and where extension authors should perform the bulk of their logic. This method is called by the buildpack while it's installing extensions.
The method is given one argument which is an Installer builder object. The object can be used to install packages, configuration files or access the context (for examples of all this, see the core extensions like HTTPD, Nginx, PHP, Dynatrace and NewRelic). The method should return 0 when successful or any other number when it fails. Optionally, the extension can raise an exception. This will also signal a failure and it can provide more details about why something failed.
It is sometimes useful to know what order the buildpack will use to call the methods in an extension. They are called in the following order.
configure
compile
service_environment
service_commands
preprocess_commands
Here is an example extension. While technically correct, it doesn't actually do anything.
Here's the directory.
$ ls -lRh
total 0
drwxr-xr-x 3 daniel staff 102B Mar 3 10:57 testextn
./testextn:
total 8
-rw-r--r-- 1 daniel staff 321B Mar 3 11:03 extension.py
Here's the code.
import logging
_log = logging.getLogger('textextn')
# Extension Methods
def configure(ctx):
pass
def preprocess_commands(ctx):
return ()
def service_commands(ctx):
return {}
def service_environment(ctx):
return {}
def compile(install):
return 0
- To be consistent with the rest of the buildpack, extensions should import and use the standard logging module. This will allow extension output to be incorporated into the output for the rest of the buildpack.
- The buildpack will run every extension that is included with the buildpack and the application. There is no mechanism to disable specific extensions. Thus, when you write an extension, you should make some way for the user to enable / disable it's functionality. See the NewRelic extension for an example of this.
- If an extension requires configuration, it should be included with the extension. The
defaults/options.json
file is for the buildpack and its core extensions. See the NewRelic buildpack for an example of this. - Extensions should have their own test module. This generally takes the form
tests/test_<extension_name>.py
. - Run bosh-lite. It'll speed up testing and allow you to inspect the environment manually, if needed.
- Run a local web server for your binaries. It'll seriously speed up download times.
- Test, test and test again. Create unit and integration tests for your code and extensions. This gives you quick and accurate feedback on your code. It also makes it easier for you to make changes in the future and be confident that you're not breaking stuff.
- Check your code with flake8. This linting tool can help to detect problems quickly.
Join the #buildpacks channel in our Slack community
This project is managed through GitHub. If you encounter any issues, bug or problems with the buildpack please open an issue.
The project backlog is on Pivotal Tracker