Built-in web server
This web server was designed to aid application development. It may also be useful for testing purposes or for application demonstrations that are run in controlled environments. It is not intended to be a full-featured web server. It should not be used on a public network.
As of PHP 5.4.0, the CLI SAPI provides a built-in web server.
PHP applications will stall if a request is blocked.
URI requests are served from the current working directory where PHP was started, unless the -t option is used to specify an explicit document root. If a URI request does not specify a file, then either index.php or index.html in the given directory are returned. If neither file exists, then a 404 response code is returned.
If a PHP file is given on the command line when the web server is
started it is treated as a "router" script. The script is run at
the start of each HTTP request. If this script returns FALSE
,
then the requested resource is returned as-is. Otherwise the
script's output is returned to the browser.
Standard MIME types are returned for files with extensions: .3gp, .apk, .avi, .bmp, .css, .csv, .doc, .docx, .flac, .gif, .gz, .gzip, .htm, .html, .ics, .jpe, .jpeg, .jpg, .js, .kml, .kmz, .m4a, .mov, .mp3, .mp4, .mpeg, .mpg, .odp, .ods, .odt, .oga, .ogg, .ogv, .pdf, .pdf, .png, .pps, .pptx, .qt, .svg, .swf, .tar, .text, .tif, .txt, .wav, .webm, .wmv, .xls, .xlsx, .xml, .xsl, .xsd, and .zip.
Version | Description |
---|---|
5.5.12 | .xml, .xsl, and .xsd |
5.5.7 | .3gp, .apk, .avi, .bmp, .csv, .doc, .docx, .flac, .gz, .gzip, .ics, .kml, .kmz, .m4a, .mp3, .mp4, .mpg, .mpeg, .mov, .odp, .ods, .odt, .oga, .pdf, .pptx, .pps, .qt, .swf, .tar, .text, .tif, .wav, .wmv, .xls, .xlsx, and .zip |
5.5.5 | |
5.4.11 | .ogg, .ogv, and .webm |
5.4.4 | .htm and .svg |
Example #1 Starting the web server
$ cd ~/public_html $ php -S localhost:8000
The terminal will show:
PHP 5.4.0 Development Server started at Thu Jul 21 10:43:28 2011 Listening on localhost:8000 Document root is /home/me/public_html Press Ctrl-C to quit
After URI requests for http://localhost:8000/ and http://localhost:8000/myscript.html the terminal will show something similar to:
PHP 5.4.0 Development Server started at Thu Jul 21 10:43:28 2011 Listening on localhost:8000 Document root is /home/me/public_html Press Ctrl-C to quit. [Thu Jul 21 10:48:48 2011] ::1:39144 GET /favicon.ico - Request read [Thu Jul 21 10:48:50 2011] ::1:39146 GET / - Request read [Thu Jul 21 10:48:50 2011] ::1:39147 GET /favicon.ico - Request read [Thu Jul 21 10:48:52 2011] ::1:39148 GET /myscript.html - Request read [Thu Jul 21 10:48:52 2011] ::1:39149 GET /favicon.ico - Request read
Example #2 Starting with a specific document root directory
$ cd ~/public_html $ php -S localhost:8000 -t foo/
The terminal will show:
PHP 5.4.0 Development Server started at Thu Jul 21 10:50:26 2011 Listening on localhost:8000 Document root is /home/me/public_html/foo Press Ctrl-C to quit
Example #3 Using a Router Script
In this example, requests for images will display them, but requests for HTML files will display "Welcome to PHP":
<?php
// router.php
if (preg_match('/\.(?:png|jpg|jpeg|gif)$/', $_SERVER["REQUEST_URI"])) {
return false; // serve the requested resource as-is.
} else {
echo "<p>Welcome to PHP</p>";
}
?>
$ php -S localhost:8000 router.php
Example #4 Checking for CLI Web Server Use
To reuse a framework router script during development with the CLI web server and later also with a production web server:
<?php
// router.php
if (php_sapi_name() == 'cli-server') {
/* route static assets and return false */
}
/* go on with normal index.php operations */
?>
$ php -S localhost:8000 router.php
Example #5 Handling Unsupported File Types
If you need to serve a static resource whose MIME type is not handled by the CLI web server, use:
<?php
// router.php
$path = pathinfo($_SERVER["SCRIPT_FILENAME"]);
if ($path["extension"] == "el") {
header("Content-Type: text/x-script.elisp");
readfile($_SERVER["SCRIPT_FILENAME"]);
}
else {
return FALSE;
}
?>
$ php -S localhost:8000 router.php
Example #6 Accessing the CLI Web Server From Remote Machines
You can make the web server accessible on port 8000 to any interface with:
$ php -S 0.0.0.0:8000
Коментарии
On Windows you may find useful to have a phpserver.bat file in shell:sendto with the folowing:
explorer http://localhost:8888
rem check if arg is file or dir
if exist "%~1\" (
php -S localhost:8888 -t "%~1"
) else (
php -S localhost:8888 -t "%~dp1"
)
then for fast web testing you only have to SendTo a file or folder to this bat and it will open your explorer and run the server.
In order to set project specific configuration options, simply add a php.ini file to your project, and then run the built-in server with this flag:
php -S localhost:8000 -c php.ini
This is especially helpful for settings that cannot be set at runtime (ini_set()).
If your URI contains a dot, you'll lose the $_SERVER['PATH_INFO'] variable, when using the built-in webserver.
I wanted to write an API, and use .json ending in the URI-s, but then the framework's routing mechanism broke, and it took a lot of time to discover that the reason behind it was its router relying on $_SERVER['PATH_INFO'].
References:
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=61286
It’s not mentioned directly, and may not be obvious, but you can also use this to create a virtual host. This, of course, requires the help of your hosts file.
Here are the steps:
1 /etc/hosts
127.0.0.1 www.example.com
2 cd [root folder]
php -S www.example.com:8000
3 Browser:
http://www.example.com:8000/index.php
Combined with a simple SQLite database, you have a very handy testing environment.
To output debugging information on the command line you can write output to php://stdout:
<?php
$path = $_SERVER["SCRIPT_FILENAME"];
file_put_contents("php://stdout", "\nRequested: $path");
echo "<p>Hello World</p>";
?>
I painfully experienced behaviour that I can't seem to find documented here so I wanted to save everyone from repeating my mistake by giving the following heads up:
When starting php -S on a mac (in my case macOS Sierra) to host a local server, I had trouble with connecting from legacy Java.
As it turned out, if you started the php server with
"php -S localhost:80"
the server will be started with ipv6 support only!
To access it via ipv4, you need to change the start up command like so:
"php -S 127.0.0.1:80"
which starts server in ipv4 mode only.
I fiddled around with the internal webserver and had issues regarding handling static files, that do not contain a dot and a file extension.
The webserver responded with 200 without any content for files with URIs like "/testfile".
I am not certain if this is a bug, but I created a router.php that now does not use the "return false;" operation in order to pass thru the static file by the internal webserver.
Instead I use fpassthru() to do that.
In addition to that, my router.php can be configured to...
- ... have certain index files, when requesting a directory
- ... configure regex routes, so that, if the REQUEST_URI matches the regex, a certain file or directory is requested instead. (something you would do with nginx config or .htaccess ModRewrite)
Maybe someone finds this helpful.
================================
<?php
$indexFiles = ['index.html', 'index.php'];
$routes = [
'^/api(/.*)?$' => '/index.php'
];
$requestedAbsoluteFile = dirname(__FILE__) . $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];
// check if the the request matches one of the defined routes
foreach ($routes as $regex => $fn)
{
if (preg_match('%'.$regex.'%', $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']))
{
$requestedAbsoluteFile = dirname(__FILE__) . $fn;
break;
}
}
// if request is a directory call check if index files exist
if (is_dir($requestedAbsoluteFile))
{
foreach ($indexFiles as $filename)
{
$fn = $requestedAbsoluteFile.'/'.$filename;
if (is_file($fn))
{
$requestedAbsoluteFile = $fn;
break;
}
}
}
// if requested file does not exist or is directory => 404
if (!is_file($requestedAbsoluteFile))
{
header($_SERVER['SERVER_PROTOCOL'].' 404 Not Found');
printf('"%s" does not exist', $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);
return true;
}
// if requested file is'nt a php file
if (!preg_match('/\.php$/', $requestedAbsoluteFile)) {
header('Content-Type: '.mime_content_type($requestedAbsoluteFile));
$fh = fopen($requestedAbsoluteFile, 'r');
fpassthru($fh);
fclose($fh);
return true;
}
// if requested file is php, include it
include_once $requestedAbsoluteFile;
To send environment variable as long as with PHP built-in web server, type like this.
~$ MYENV=dev php -d variables_order=EGPCS -S 0.0.0.0:8000
On PHP script we can check with this code.
<?php
echo getenv('MYENV'); // print dev
Listen on all addresses of IPv4:
php -S 0.0.0.0:80
Listen on all addresses of IPv6:
php -S [::0]:80
Built-in web server uses SAPI logging subsystem. Therefore all messages are written to standard error, and not to standard output stream.
If you want to save server logs into a file, the following command will work:
php -S 0.0.0.0:80 2>&1 | tee out.log