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General purpose PHP images for Docker

Docker PHP Images GitHub workflow

This repository contains a set of developer-friendly, general purpose PHP images for Docker.

  • Based on the work of TheCodingMachine ❤️.
  • You can enable or disable the extensions using environment variables.
  • You can also modify the php.ini settings using environment variables.
  • 2 types available: slim (no extensions preloaded) or fat (most common PHP extensions are built-in).
  • 3 variants available: CLI, apache and fpm.
  • Fat images are bundled with Supercronic which is a Cron compatible task runner. Cron jobs can be configured using environment variables.
  • Fat images come with Composer installed.
  • Fat images also contain wkhtmltopdf and wkhtmltoimage.
  • All variants can be installed with or without NodeJS (if you need to build your static assets).
  • Everything is done to limit file permission issues that often arise when using Docker. The image is actively tested on Linux, Windows and MacOS.
  • Built upon Ubuntu 22.04 LTS.
  • All images are available for the x86_64 and ARM64 architecture.

Images

Name PHP version type variant NodeJS version
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache 8.3.x fat apache N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache-node20 8.3.x fat apache 20.x
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache-node18 8.3.x fat apache 18.x
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-fpm 8.3.x fat fpm N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-fpm-node20 8.3.x fat fpm 20.x
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-fpm-node18 8.3.x fat fpm 18.x
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-cli 8.3.x fat cli N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-cli-node20 8.3.x fat cli 20.x
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-cli-node18 8.3.x fat cli 18.x
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-slim-apache 8.3.x slim apache N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-slim-fpm 8.3.x slim fpm N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-slim-cli 8.3.x slim cli N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-apache 8.2.x fat apache N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-apache-node20 8.2.x fat apache 20.x
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-apache-node18 8.2.x fat apache 18.x
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-fpm 8.2.x fat fpm N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-fpm-node20 8.2.x fat fpm 20.x
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-fpm-node18 8.2.x fat fpm 18.x
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-cli 8.2.x fat cli N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-cli-node20 8.2.x fat cli 20.x
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-cli-node18 8.2.x fat cli 18.x
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-slim-apache 8.2.x slim apache N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-slim-fpm 8.2.x slim fpm N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.2-v7-slim-cli 8.2.x slim cli N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-apache 8.1.x fat apache N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-apache-node20 8.1.x fat apache 20.x
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-apache-node18 8.1.x fat apache 18.x
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-fpm 8.1.x fat fpm N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-fpm-node20 8.1.x fat fpm 20.x
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-fpm-node18 8.1.x fat fpm 18.x
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-cli 8.1.x fat cli N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-cli-node20 8.1.x fat cli 20.x
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-cli-node18 8.1.x fat cli 18.x
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-slim-apache 8.1.x slim apache N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-slim-fpm 8.1.x slim fpm N/A
qonstrukt/php:8.1-v7-slim-cli 8.1.x slim cli N/A

Note: we also tag patch releases of PHP versions. So you can specify a specific patch release using qonstrukt/php:8.3.2-v7-cli for instance. However, unless you have a very specific need (for instance if the latest patch release of PHP introduced regressions), believe you have no valid reason to ask explicitly for 8.3.2 for instance. When 8.3.3 is out, you certainly want to upgrade automatically to this patch release since patch releases contain only bugfixes. Also, we automatically rebuild X.Y images every week, but only the latest X.Y.Z patch release gets a rebuild. The other patch releases are frozen in time and will contain bugs and security issues. So use those with great care.

[Major].[minor] images are automatically updated when a new patch version of PHP is released, so the PHP 7.4 image will always contain the most up-to-date version of the PHP 7.4.x branch.

Usage

These images are based on the official PHP image.

Example with CLI:

$ docker run -it --rm --name my-running-script -v "$PWD":/usr/src/app qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-cli php your-script.php

Example with Apache:

$ docker run -p 80:80 --rm --name my-apache-php-app -v "$PWD":/var/www/html qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache

Example with PHP-FPM:

$ docker run -p 9000:9000 --rm --name my-php-fpm -v "$PWD":/var/www/html qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-fpm

Example with Apache + Node 20.x in a Dockerfile:

Dockerfile

FROM qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache-node20

COPY src/ /var/www/html/
RUN composer install
RUN npm install
RUN npm run build

Extensions available

This image comes with 2 "types": the slim and the fat image.

These extensions are enabled by default in slim image: calendar ctype curl date dom exif fileinfo filter ftp gettext iconv json mbstring opcache openssl pcntl pcre PDO Phar posix readline shmop Reflection session shmop SimpleXML sockets sodium SPL sysvmsg sysvsem sysvshm tokenizer xml xmlreader xmlwriter xsl zip

This list can be outdated, you can verify by executing : docker run --rm -it qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-slim-cli php -m

The slim image provides a simple way to install the other extensions. You would typically use the "slim" image in a Dockerfile when building your own custom image.

The fat image contains the most commonly used extensions. You would typically use it in a local or CI environment.

Fat image

Below is a list of extensions available in this image:

Enabled by default (in addition to extensions enabled in Slim image): apcu, hash, iconv, igbinary, mysqli, mysqlnd, redis, soap, xsl, zlib and all enabled in slim.

Available (can be enabled using environment variables): amqp ast bcmath blackfire bz2 dba ds enchant ev event exif mailparse msgpack gd gettext gmp gnupg grpc igbinary imagick imap intl ldap mcrypt memcached mongodb pcov pdo_dblib pdo_pgsql pdo_sqlite pgsql pspell shmop snmp sockets sqlite3 swoole tidy uploadprogress uuid weakref(-beta) xdebug xmlrpc xsl yaml

This list can be outdated, you can verify by executing : docker run --rm -it qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-cli php -m

Note:

  • mcrypt is not available anymore in PHP 8.1+
  • ev, gettext are not available in PHP 8.1+
  • ev, rdkafka, swoole are not available in all ARM64 images (build time is too long, it's possible to install manually as required)

Enabling/disabling extensions in the fat image

You can enable/disable extensions using the PHP_EXTENSION_[extension_name] environment variable.

For instance:

version: '3'
services:
  my_app:
    image: qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache-node20
    environment:
      # Enable the PostgreSQL extension
      PHP_EXTENSION_PGSQL: 1
      # Disable the Mysqli extension (otherwise it is enabled by default)
      PHP_EXTENSION_MYSQLI: 0

As an alternative, you can use the PHP_EXTENSIONS global variable:

PHP_EXTENSIONS=pgsql gettext imap

Compiling extensions in the slim image

If you are using the slim image, you can automatically compile the extensions using the PHP_EXTENSIONS ARG in your Dockerfile.

ARG PHP_EXTENSIONS="apcu mysqli pdo_mysql redis soap"
FROM qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-slim-apache
# The build will automatically trigger the download and compilation
# of the extensions (thanks to a ONBUILD hook in the slim image)

Beware :

  • The ARG PHP_EXTENSIONS command must be written before the FROM. This is not a typo.
  • ARG PHP_EXTENSIONS="" it's not the same as ENV PHP_EXTENSIONS=""
  • You can't use ARG PHP_EXTENSION_MYEXT="" like the fat image.
  • Heads up: if you are using multistage builds, the "ARG" variable must be put at the very top of the file (before the first FROM):
# The PHP_EXTENSIONS ARG will apply to the "slim" image
ARG PHP_EXTENSIONS="apcu mysqli pdo_mysql soap"

FROM qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache-node20 AS builder

COPY --chown=docker:docker sources/web .
RUN composer install &&\
    yarn install &&\
    yarn build

# The slim image will automatically build the extensions from the list provided at the very top of the file.
FROM qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-slim-apache

ENV APP_ENV=prod \
    APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT=public/

COPY --from=builder /var/www/html .

In the sample above, we use the fat image to perform a "yarn build", but copy the result in a slim image that does not contain Node, and contains only required extensions.

Setting parameters in php.ini

By default, the base php.ini file used is the development php.ini file that comes with PHP.

You can use the production php.ini file using the TEMPLATE_PHP_INI environment variable:

# Use the production php.ini file as a base
TEMPLATE_PHP_INI=production

You can override parameters in php.ini using the PHP_INI_XXX environment variables:

version: '3'
services:
  my_app:
    image: qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache-node20
    environment:
      # set the parameter memory_limit=1g
      PHP_INI_MEMORY_LIMIT: 1g
      # set the parameter error_reporting=EALL
      PHP_INI_ERROR_REPORTING: E_ALL

Absolutely all php.ini parameters can be set.

Internally, the image will map all environment variables starting with PHP_INI_.

If your php.ini parameter contains a dot ("."), you can replace it with a double underscore ("__").

For instance:

# Will set the parameter xdebug.remote_autostart=1
PHP_INI_XDEBUG__REMOTE_AUTOSTART=1

Default working directory

The working directory (the directory in which you should mount/copy your application) depends on the image variant you are using:

Variant Working directory
cli /usr/src/app
apache /var/www/html
fpm /var/www/html

Changing Apache document root

For the apache variant, you can change the document root of Apache (i.e. your "public" directory) by using the APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT variable:

# The root of your website is in the "public" directory:
APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT=public/

If the APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT starts with a "/", it will be considered an absolute path. If the APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT does not starts with a "/", it will be a path relative to "/var/www/html".

# These 2 variables are identical
APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT=public/
APACHE_DOCUMENT_ROOT=/var/www/html/public

Enabling/disabling Apache extensions

You can enable/disable Apache extensions using the APACHE_EXTENSION_[extension_name] environment variable.

For instance:

version: '3'
services:
  my_app:
    image: qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache-node2node200
    environment:
      # Enable the DAV extension for Apache
      APACHE_EXTENSION_DAV: 1
      # Enable the SSL extension for Apache
      APACHE_EXTENSION_SSL: 1

As an alternative, you can use the APACHE_EXTENSIONS global variable:

APACHE_EXTENSIONS="dav ssl"

Apache modules enabled by default: access_compat alias auth_basic authn_core authn_file authz_core authz_host authz_user autoindex deflate dir env expires filter mime mpm_prefork negotiation php8.3 (depend of your active version) reqtimeout rewrite setenvif status

Apache modules available: access_compat actions alias allowmethods asis auth_basic auth_digest auth_form authn_anon authn_core authn_dbd authn_dbm authn_file authn_socache authnz_fcgi authnz_ldap authz_core authz_dbd authz_dbm authz_groupfile authz_host authz_owner authz_user autoindex brotli buffer cache cache_disk cache_socache cern_meta cgi cgid charset_lite data dav dav_fs dav_lock dbd deflate dialup dir dump_io echo env ext_filter expires file_cache filter headers heartbeat heartmonitor http2 ident imagemap include info lbmethod_bybusyness lbmethod_byrequests lbmethod_bytraffic lbmethod_heartbeat ldap log_debug log_forensic lua macro md mime mime_magic mpm_event mpm_prefork mpm_worker negotiation php8.3 (depend of your active version) proxy proxy_ajp proxy_balancer proxy_connect proxy_express proxy_fcgi proxy_fdpass proxy_ftp proxy_hcheck proxy_html proxy_http proxy_http2 proxy_scgi proxy_wstunnel ratelimit reflector remoteip reqtimeout request rewrite sed session session_cookie session_crypto session_dbd setenvif slotmem_plain slotmem_shm socache_dbm socache_memcache socache_redis socache_shmcb speling ssl status substitute suexec unique_id userdir usertrack vhost_alias xml2enc

This list can be outdated, you can verify by executing : docker run --rm -it qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-slim-apache a2enmod

Debugging

To enable XDebug you simply have to set the environment variable:

PHP_EXTENSION_XDEBUG=1

If you enable XDebug, the image will do its best to configure the xdebug.client_host to point back to your Docker host.

Behind the scenes, the image will:

  • set the parameter xdebug.mode=debug
  • if you are using a Linux machine, the xdebug.client_host IP will point to your Docker gateway
  • if you are using a Windows or MaxOS machine, the xdebug.client_host IP will point to host.docker.internal or docker.for.mac.localhost

If you want to debug directly inside your container (for example if you're using VSCode devcontainers) you can overwrite the xdebug.client_host value by setting the following environment variable:

XDEBUG_CLIENT_HOST=127.0.0.1

In that case the manually set value takes precedence over the mentioned ones above.

NodeJS

The fat images come with a Node variant. You can use Node 16, 18 or 20.

If you use the slim images, you can install a NodeJS version with a simple ARG during the build:

ARG NODE_VERSION=20
FROM qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-slim-apache
# The build will automatically trigger the download of Node 20
# (thanks to a ONBUILD hook in the slim image)

Beware! The ARG NODE_VERSION command must be written before the FROM. This is not a typo.

NODE_VERSION can take any valid node version.

Permissions

Ever faced file permission issues with Docker? Good news, this is a thing of the past!

If you are used to running Docker containers with the base PHP image, you probably noticed that when running commands (like composer install) within the container, files are associated to the root user. This is because the base user of the image is "root".

When you mount your project directory into /var/www/html, it would be great if the default user used by Docker could be your current host user.

The problem with Docker is that the container and the host do not share the same list of users. For instance, you might be logged in on your host computer as superdev (ID: 1000), and the container has no user whose ID is 1000.

The qonstrukt/php images solve this issue with a bit of black magic:

The image contains a user named docker. On container startup, the startup script will look at the owner of the working directory (/var/www/html for Apache/PHP-FPM, or /usr/src/app for CLI). The script will then assume that you want to run commands as this user. So it will dynamically change the ID of the docker user to match the ID of the current working directory user.

Furthermore, the image is changing the Apache default user/group to be docker/docker (instead if www-data/www-data). So Apache will run with the same rights as the user on your host.

The direct result is that, in development:

  • Your PHP application can edit any file
  • Your container can edit any file
  • You can still edit any file created by Apache or by the container in CLI

Using this image in production

By changing the Apache user to be docker:docker, we are lowering the security. This is OK for a development environment, but this should be avoided in production. Indeed, in production, Apache should not be allowed to edit PHP files of your application. If for some reason, an attacker manages to change PHP files using a security hole, he could then run any PHP script by editing the PHP files of your application.

In production, you want to change back the Apache user to www-data.

This can be done easily:

Dockerfile

FROM qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache

# ...

# Change back Apache user and group to www-data
ENV APACHE_RUN_USER=www-data \
    APACHE_RUN_GROUP=www-data

Setting up CRON jobs

You can set up CRON jobs using environment variables too.

To do this, you need to configure 3 variables:

# configure the user that will run cron (defaults to root)
CRON_USER=root
# configure the schedule for the cron job (here: run every minute)
CRON_SCHEDULE=* * * * *
# last but not least, configure the command
CRON_COMMAND=vendor/bin/console do:stuff

By default, CRON output will be redirected to Docker output.

If you have more than one job to run, you can suffix your environment variable with the same string. For instance:

CRON_USER_1=root
CRON_SCHEDULE_1=* * * * *
CRON_COMMAND_1=vendor/bin/console do:stuff

CRON_USER_2=www-data
CRON_SCHEDULE_2=0 3 * * *
CRON_COMMAND_2=vendor/bin/console other:stuff

Cron is installed by default in the fat images. If you are using the "slim" images, you need to install it by passing a single argument before the "FROM" clause in your Dockerfile:

ARG INSTALL_CRON=1
FROM qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-slim-apache
# The build triggers automatically the installation of Cron

Important: The cron runner we use is "Supercronic" and not the orginial "cron" that has a number of issues with containers. Even with Supercronic, the architecture of cron was never designed with Docker in mind (Cron is way older than Docker). It will run correctly on your container. If at some point you want to scale and add more containers, it will run on all your containers. At that point, if you only want to run a Cron task once for your application (and not once per container), you might want to have a look at alternative solutions like Tasker or use the native features of your orchestrator (if you use Kubernetes, you have a native task runner available), or one of the many other alternatives.

Please notice that by default, containers are running in the UTC timezone. So your CRONs will run at UTC time. If you want to change a timezone in a container, you can use the TZ environment variable.

# Run this cron at 1 am, Paris time
TZ=Europe/Paris
CRON_SCHEDULE_1=0 1 * * *
CRON_COMMAND_1=vendor/bin/console do:stuff

Supercronic options

To specify Supercronic options you can set the SUPERCRONIC_OPTIONS environment variable.

This can be used to enable duplicate jobs. Per default, Supercronic will wait for a given job to finish before that job is scheduled again.
With the option -overlapping Supercronic will run duplicate instances of the jobs instead of waiting for them.

SUPERCRONIC_OPTIONS=-overlapping

# Or multiple options
SUPERCRONIC_OPTIONS=-overlapping -debug

For more options see see the Supercronic Documentation.

Launching commands on container startup

You can launch commands on container startup using the STARTUP_COMMAND_XXX environment variables. This can be very helpful to install dependencies or apply database patches for instance:

STARTUP_COMMAND_1=composer install
STARTUP_COMMAND_2=vendor/bin/doctrine orm:schema-tool:update 

As an alternative, the images will look into the container for an executable file named /etc/container/startup.sh.

If such a file is mounted in the image, it will be executed on container startup.

docker run -it --rm --name my-running-script -v "$PWD":/usr/src/myapp -w /usr/src/myapp \ 
       -v $PWD/my-startup-script.sh:/etc/container/startup.sh qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-cli php your-script.php 

Using the CLI variant

The CLI images (qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-cli) expect a command to be passed in parameter. You should override the Docker "command".

Important! You should not override the Docker "entrypoint".

Usage in a Dockerfile:

FROM qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-cli

CMD ["php", "myprogram.php", "some_param"]

Usage with Docker compose:

docker-compose.yml

version: '3'
services:
  my_app:
    image: qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-cli
    command: php myprogram.php some_param

Registering SSH private keys

If your PHP project as a dependency on a package stored in a private GIT repository, your composer install commands will not work unless you register your private key in the container.

You have several options to do this.

Option 1: mount your keys in the container directly

This option is the easiest way to go if you are using the image on a development environment.

docker-compose.yml

version: '3'
services:
  my_app:
    image: qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache-node20
    volumes:
      - ~/.ssh:/home/docker/.ssh

Option 2: store the keys from environment variables or build arguments

Look at this option if you are building a Dockerfile from this image.

The first thing to do is to get the signature of the server you want to connect to.

$ ssh-keyscan myserver.com

Copy the output and put it in an environment variable. We assume the content is stored in $SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS.

Now, let's write a Dockerfile.

Dockerfile

FROM qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache

ARG SSH_PRIVATE_KEY
ARG SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS

# Let's register the private key
RUN ssh-add <(echo "$SSH_PRIVATE_KEY")
# Let's add the server to the list of known hosts.
RUN echo "$SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS" >> ~/.ssh/known_hosts

Finally, when triggering the build, you must pass the 2 variables as build arguments:

$ docker build -t my_image --build-arg SSH_PRIVATE_KEY="$SSH_PRIVATE_KEY" --build-arg SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS="$SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS" .

Usage in Kubernetes

If you plan to use this image in Kubernetes, please be aware that the image internally uses sudo. This is because the default user (docker) needs to be able to edit php config files as root.

Kubernetes has a security setting (allowPrivilegeEscalation) that can disallow the use of sudo. The use of this flag breaks the image and in the logs, you will find the message:

sudo: effective uid is not 0, is /usr/bin/sudo on a file system with the 'nosuid' option set or an NFS file system without root privileges?

Please be sure that this option is never set to false:

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
# ...
spec:
  containers:
  - name: foobar
    image: qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache
    securityContext:
      allowPrivilegeEscalation: true # never use "false" here.

Profiling with Blackfire

This image comes with the Blackfire PHP probe. You can install it using:

PHP_EXTENSION_BLACKFIRE=1

By default, the image expects that the blackfire agent is started in another container.

Your docker-compose.yml file will typically look like this:

docker-compose.yml

version: '3.3'
services:
  php:
    image: qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache
    ports:
      - "80:80"
    environment:
      PHP_EXTENSION_BLACKFIRE: 1
  blackfire:
    image: blackfire/blackfire
    environment:
        # Exposes the host BLACKFIRE_SERVER_ID and TOKEN environment variables.
        - BLACKFIRE_SERVER_ID
        - BLACKFIRE_SERVER_TOKEN
        # You can also use global environment credentials :
        # BLACKFIRE_SERVER_ID: SERVER-ID
        # BLACKFIRE_SERVER_TOKEN: SERVER-TOKEN

See Blackfire Docker documentation for more information.

The image assumes that the Blackfire agent is accessible via the blackfire URL (like in the exemple above). If for some reason, the container name is not "blackfire", you can customize the agent URL with the BLACKFIRE_AGENT environment variable:

docker-compose.yml

version: '3.3'
services:
  php:
    image: qonstrukt/php:8.3-v7-apache
    environment:
      PHP_EXTENSION_BLACKFIRE: 1
      BLACKFIRE_AGENT: myblackfire
    # ...
  myblackfire:
    image: blackfire/blackfire
    environment:
        # ...

Migrating from older image versions

Check the migration notes.

Contributing

There is one branch per minor PHP version and version of the image.

Please submit your pull requests to the lowest branch where is applies.

The Dockerfiles and the README are generated from a template using Orbit.

If you want to modify a Dockerfile or the README, you should instead edit the utils/Dockerfile.blueprint or utils/README.blueprint.md and then run the command:

$ orbit run generate

This command will generate all the files from the "blueprint" templates.

You can then test your changes using the build-and-test.sh command:

PHP_VERSION=8.3 BRANCH=v7 VARIANT=apache ./build-and-test.sh

Adding additional images

To add a new version (php, node, apache, ...), please edit the following files :

  • utils/README.blueprint.md
    • Add your image in this section: Images
  • orbit.yml: Your image in generation task
  • .travis.yml: To check the new image
  • build-and-test.sh: Add your image in test

Special thanks

These images have been strongly inspired by tetraweb/php.

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