- Fast deployments, because the runtime environment is built from precompiled binaries via Heroku's "vulcan"
- Supports PHP 5.3, 5.4 and 5.5
- Uses the memory of the dyno more efficiently by going with NGINX and PHP-FPM.
- Supports Composer out of the box
- No writing NGINX configuration files: supports CakePHP, Classic PHP applications, Magento, Silex, Slim, Symfony 2 and ZF2 apps with simple configuration driven by your
composer.json
. - Zero-Configuration Symfony 2 deployment.
- Dynamic installing of supported extensions listed as
ext-
requirments incomposer.json
.
Use the --buildpack
parameter when creating a new app:
heroku create --buildpack https://github.com/CHH/heroku-buildpack-php myapp
Or set the BUILDPACK_URL
config var on an existing app:
heroku config:set BUILDPACK_URL=https://github.com/CHH/heroku-buildpack-php
If you want to be on the bleeding edge and use pre-release features, then use
git://github.com/CHH/heroku-buildpack-php#development
as buildpack
url.
- NGINX 1.4 or 1.5
- PHP 5.3, 5.4 and 5.5, with ZendOpcache and APCu (Info)
- PHP-FPM
This buildpack detects apps when the app has a composer.lock
in the
app's root.
If an index.php
is detected in the app's root, then it switches to
"classic mode", which means that every ".php" file is served with PHP,
and the document root is set to the app root.
When a composer.lock
is detected, then the buildpack does composer install --no-dev
.
This buildpack sets environment variables during compile and runtime:
HEROKU_BUILD_TIME
: Time when the slug was compiled. Format is%Y%m%d%H%M%S
, e.g.20131103111548
This buildpack also detects when the app has a node package.json
in the
app's root. And will install node dependencies like less for example.
Is used when the app requires the pear-pear.cakephp.org/CakePHP
Pear package or when the
extra.heroku.framework
key is set to cakephp2
in the composer.json
. This project assumes the layout given in the FriendsOfCake/app-template composer project.
Options:
index-document
: With CakePHP apps, this should be the file where$Dispatcher->dispatch(new CakeRequest(), new CakeResponse());
is called. All requests which don't match an existing file will be forwarded to this document.
The classic PHP configuration is used as fallback when no framework was detected. It serves every .php
file relative to the document root.
This is also used when an index.php
file was found in the root of your
project and no composer.json
.
Is used when the extra.heroku.framework
key is set to magento
in the composer.json
.
Is used when the app requires the silex/silex
package or when the
framework
setting is set to silex
in the composer.json
.
Options:
index-document
: With Silex apps, this should be the file where$app->run()
is called. All requests which don't match an existing file will be forwarded to this document.
Is used when the app requires the slim/slim
package or when the
extra.heroku.framework
key is set to slim
in the composer.json
.
Options:
index-document
: With Slim apps, this should be the file where$app->run()
is called. All requests which don't match an existing file will be forwarded to this document.
Is detected when the app requires the symfony/symfony
package or when the
framework
setting is set to symfony2
in the composer.json
.
This framework preset doesn't need any configuration to work.
Please note that if you use config vars in Composer hooks, or in compile
scripts, then a new code push may be necessary if you decide to change a config variable.
When the buildpack encounters ext-
requirements in your composer.json
, it will look
up the extension name in the supported extensions and install them.
The version constraint is ignored currently.
For example, to install the Sundown extension:
{
"require": {
"ext-sundown": "*"
}
}
Note that the extension requirements defined by dependencies are not taken into account there. It must be required by the project itself.
##Logging
This buildpack defines default log files by framework. It also defines log files nginx and php.
Configuration is done via a file named composer.json
in the app's
root.
A simple configuration could look like this:
{
"require": {
"php": ">=5.4.0",
"silex/silex": "~1.0@dev"
},
"extra": {
"heroku": {
"document-root": "web",
"index-document": "index.php"
}
}
}
This configures an app with the document root set to the project's web
directory, and sets that all requests should go through web/index.php
which contains the application's front controller.
This buildpack supports configuration through directives placed in the heroku
key in the extra
object.
Default: Null
Use a framework preset for configuration. Some configuration keys cannot be overriden!
Available presets:
cakephp2
magento
silex
(needsdocument-root
andindex-document
set)slim
symfony2
Example:
"framework": "silex"
Document root relative to the app root. Defaults to the app root.
"document-root": "web"
Default: "index.php"
Index Document relative to the document root.
"index-document": "app.php"
Set PHP and NGINX versions.
To launch the app with PHP 5.3.23 and NGINX 1.3.14:
"engines": {
"php": "5.3.23",
"nginx": "1.3.14"
}
Set the version to "default" to use the current default version. The current
default versions are NGINX 1.4.4
and PHP 5.5.10
.
The version identifiers can also include wildcards, e.g. 5.4.*
. At the
time of writing, PHP 5.4.26
would be used in this case. This also
works for NGINX.
When a file named .php-version
exists in the project root, then the
PHP version is read from this file instead.
See also:
Default: []
Add directives to the php.ini
.
"php-config": [
"display_errors=off",
"short_open_tag=on"
]
Default: []
Include additional .ini files that should be parsed after the default php.ini. File paths are treated relative to the app root.
Example:
"php-includes": ["etc/php.ini"]
Default: []
Include additional config files into the NGINX configuration. Config
files are included into the server
scope and are loaded after the
framework provided config. File paths are treated relative to the app
root.
Example:
"nginx-includes": ["etc/nginx.conf"]
Default: []
Run console commands on slug compilation.
"compile": [
"php app/console assetic:dump --env=prod --no-debug"
]
Note: pecl is not runnable this way.
Default: false
Enable instrumentation support via New Relic.
It's recommended to add the New Relic addon to your Heroku app, but you
can also set your license key manually by setting the NEW_RELIC_LICENSE_KEY
config var via heroku config:set
.
"newrelic": true
Default: []
The buildpack defines default log files by framework and some log files for php-fpm and nginx.
Any file put in log-files
will be be appended to the list.
A tail on each unique log file will be run at application startup
"log-files": [
"app/logs/rabbit-mq.log",
"vendor/nginx/stuff.log"
],
If your app contains a package.json
node and its dependencies will be installed
The nodejs buildpack is based on the heroku diet node.js buildpack. This diet branch of the buildpack is intended to replace the official Node.js buildpack once it has been tested by some users.
It :
- Uses the latest stable version of node and npm by default.
- Allows any recent version of node to be used, including pre-release versions, as soon as they become available on nodejs.org/dist.
- Uses the version of npm that comes bundled with node instead of downloading and compiling them separately. npm has been bundled with node since v0.6.3 (Nov 2011). This effectively means that node versions
<0.6.3
are no longer supported, and that theengines.npm
field in package.json is now ignored. - Makes use of an s3 caching proxy of nodejs.org for faster downloads of the node binaries.
- Makes fewer HTTP requests when resolving node versions.
- Uses an updated version of node-semver for dependency resolution.
- No longer depends on SCONS.
- Caches the
node_modules
directory across builds. - Runs
npm prune
after restoring cached modules, to ensure that any modules formerly used by your app aren't needlessly installed and/or compiled.
A minimal package.json
file with less will look like this :
{
"author": "Your Name",
"name": "App",
"dependencies": {
"less": ">= 1.4.*"
}
}
Node and its modules will be available at compilation meaning you could process nodejs script at that time.
Please see the CONTRIBUTING file for all the details.