I will tell you a story. Once upon a time... Seriously though, it was not too long ago in the past - but it happened and it is possible you can benefit from it.
What?
This tutorial will show how to make lighttpd 1.4.20 serve virtual hosts with CakePHP applications. Our scenario is quite simple:
- For admin purposes, lighttpd will listen on localhost, it will serve several CakePHP applications on several external ip addresses, without SSL.
- Virtual hosts will be organized in groups and every group will use one CakePHP core checkout for its virtual hosts.
- Every virtual host will have it own access log (this server will not run hundreds of virtual hosts, so we can afford to waste one file descriptor for each) and its own directory for caching of compressed static files.
- Management of virtual hosts, their default and custom settings should be as easy as possible, so we can delegate the management of some ip addresses or just groups of virthosts to someone else and sleep well, because nobody will have to touch our precious configuration files.
However, our scenario has some special requirements which we need to solve. By the way, I will be showing you how to do things the hard way from the start. In hopes to spare you a lot of headaches in future. Lighttpd is sweet piece of software, and is under active development. Unfortunately, there are things that are not easy to set up. For example - when using any of provided virtual host modules, it is impossible to set up different access logs and cache directories for compressed content etc. dynamically in a pure lighty config file without external scripts. Everything (except for per virtual host errorlog) is possible by writing necessary configuration by hand. But we willing to work more now, so we can be lazy later!
There are several approaches for bash, Ruby etc. However, nothing usable in PHP as far as I know. I will show you how easy it could be. Take this as a working example, I am sharing ideas here, not bullet-proof all-mighty solutions. Lets go for it - and utilize PHP and the include_shell command in our lighttpd configuration file. The motto of this article is: it is easier read generated configuration, then write it by hand.
How? Lighty!
Don't think this is not a good answer. Lets set up a decent lighttpd installation. We'll assume you have it compiled and installed. Lets also assume that you have PHP prepared for lighttpd's ModFastCGI and are just waiting for configuration and the first test run. Also, for shell commands which need to be executed under root account, I'll use sudo
in following examples.
sudo mkdir /usr/local/etc/lighttpd
First of all, we need a directory for our custom configuration. When in doubt, a fast look into its contents will tell you everything one should know about virtual hosts configuration.
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/www/data/default/webroot echo "<html><head><title>It works<body>It works" > /usr/local/www/data/default/webroot/index.html
Next we created a directory for our default webroot. It will be used on localhost only, with index.html.
sudo touch /var/log/lighttpd.error.log /var/log/lighttpd.access.log sudo chown www:www /var/log/lighttpd.error.log /var/log/lighttpd.access.log
Now we need to create error and access log files. The first one will be common for whole server, the second will be used for localhost only.
sudo mkdir -p /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/default sudo chown -R www:www /var/cache/lighttpd
The last thing we had to prepare was the default directory for caching of compressed static files.
In /usr/local/etc/lighttpd.conf
we will setup a simple config file containing the common configuration we will utilize later:
server.modules = ( "mod_simple_vhost", "mod_magnet", "mod_redirect", "mod_access", "mod_auth", "mod_expire", "mod_compress", "mod_fastcgi", "mod_accesslog" ) server.document-root = "/usr/local/www/data/default/webroot/" server.errorlog = "/var/log/lighttpd.error.log" accesslog.filename = "/var/log/lighttpd.access.log" server.port = 80 server.bind = "127.0.0.1" server.username = "www" server.groupname = "www" server.pid-file = "/var/run/lighttpd.pid" index-file.names = ( "index.php", "index.html", "index.htm", "default.htm" ) # shortened !!! mimetype.assign = ( ... ) url.access-deny = ( "~", ".inc" ) static-file.exclude-extensions = ( ".php", ".pl", ".fcgi" ) dir-listing.activate = "disable" etag.use-mtime = "enable" static-file.etags = "enable" $HTTP["url"] =~ "^(/css/|/files/|/img/|/js/|/images/|/themed/|/favicon.ico)" { expire.url = ( "" => "access 7 days" ) } compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/default/" compress.filetype = ( "text/plain", "text/html", "text/xml", "text/javascript", "text/css" ) fastcgi.server = ( ".php" => (( "bin-path" => "/usr/local/bin/php-cgi -c /usr/local/etc/php.ini", "socket" => "/tmp/lighttpd_php5.socket", "min-procs" => 1, "max-procs" => 1, "bin-environment" => ( "FCGI_WEB_SERVER_ADDRS" => "127.0.0.1", "PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN" => "4", "PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS" => "1000" ), "bin-copy-environment" => ( "PATH", "SHELL", "USER"), "broken-scriptfilename" => "enable" )) ) simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/www/data/" simple-vhost.document-root = "webroot" simple-vhost.default-host = "default" $HTTP["host"] =~ "^www\.(.*)" { url.redirect = ( "^/(.*)" => "http://%1/$1" ) }
How far along are we? So far we have a configured webserver with few preloaded modules and simple common configuration.
Our sever is currently:
- Listening on localhost:80.
- Refusing directory listing or sending some filetypes as plain text.
- Using etags and sending expiration headers for a set of static resources to 7 days by default. This allows us to schedule an upgrade of any virtual host just a week before it will happen.
- Using compression and caching of compressed static files for several mimetypes.
- Starting PHP as FastCGI, with only one parent process (we are going to use opcode cache). We are allowing only few child processes for this example tutorial and killing fcgi child processes after every 1000 requests
- Using mod_simple_vhost for name-based virtual hosting (preconfigured for fallback to default webroot).
- Redirecting all domains using www subdomain to the shorter version.
You will probably want to tweak some other settings. I am not going to describe all the server.max*
configuration options, or talk about other pretty obvious things like mod_evasive
, mod_status
, mod_rrdtool
etc, don't worry. Two things you should consider if some of your visitors will use one of the major browsers.
$HTTP["url"] =~ "\.pdf$" { server.range-requests = "disable" }
You do not want to cut off IE users from your pdf documents, right?
compress.filetype = ( "text/plain", "text/html", "text/xml" ) $HTTP["useragent"] =~ "Firefox" { compress.filetype += ("text/javascript", "text/css" ) }
If your visitors are using an old (and/or above mentioned undesirable) internet browser, you can control compression settings per useragent in this way. Instead of the above example, compressing all 5 crucial mimetypes.
Ready to go? Ok, start lighttpd and make sure you see what you expect at http://localhost/
echo "<?php phpinfo(); ?>" > /usr/local/www/data/default/webroot/phpinfo.php
Just to be sure that fcgi works as expected, try to see info about your current PHP setup at http://localhost/phpinfo.php
and watch /var/log/lighttpd.error.log
.
Url rewriting
It is possible to use lighttpd's mod_rewrite and create pattern for our static files if we are sure they exist. This approach has downsides though. We want to setup this part of webserver up and forget it exists. This is not possible with mod_rewrite, because for example, we are not going to force our developers to forget about /js/something.js
as url for some of application controllers. Instead, we will use mod_magnet and custom Lua script. Visit this thread at CakePHP Google Group. Save the provided script to /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/cleanurl-v6.lua
and add the following line to bottom of /usr/local/etc/lighttpd.conf
:
magnet.attract-physical-path-to = ( "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/cleanurl-v6.lua" )
After restarting lighttpd, we are ready to remove all the .htaccess
files from our filesystem and forget they exist. All requests for non-existing static files will be rewritten to /index.php?url=xxx
like CakePHP requires.
Virtual hosts
Now we want to set up a directory structure and custom configuration for our virtual hosts and their groups. We will design a directory structure that can be used for dynamic configuration later, with no need to repeat anything obvious in configuration files. In this case, only logs
folder matters (make sure it is writable by webserver). We will symlink everything else. Lets use the following directory structure with CakePHP core and our applications checkouts like our standard:
# example.com (with redirect from www.example.com) /home/company/ logs/ www/ cake/ mainsite/ ... webroot/ vendors/ # dev-main.example.com and dev-product.example.com /home/development/ logs/ www/ cake/ mainsite/ ... webroot/ product/ ... webroot/ vendors/ # stage-main.example.com and stage-product.example.com /home/staging/ logs/ www/ cake/ mainsite/ ... webroot/ product/ ... webroot/ vendors/ # api.example.com, book.example.com, product.com ( with redirect from www.product.com) /home/product/ logs/ www/ api/ ... index.html book/ ... webroot/ cake/ product/ ... webroot/ vendors/
If you think the above directory tree is overcomplicated, or it seems too long for simple tutorial example, stop reading please, and feel free to come back any time later. It was nice to meet you :-) Things are only getting worse from here on in. For those brave enough to read on, you should have an idea of which domains will use which applications, and which applications will share one CakePHP core and folder for logs (not necessarily, read more).
Now we are getting somewhere - we need tell our webserver on which external ip addresses it has to listen for incoming connections, and which virtual hosts map to each ip address. Our www subdomains (redirected) should listen on a different ip address then their short versions. This allows us to use different SSL certificates for them later, if there is a need for secure connections. To show what is possible with our config parser, api.example.com
will not use a /webroot/
folder, it contains just static html files. To make things even more tricky, api.example.com
and book.example.com
will not listen on same ip like their neighbour application product.com
.
cd /usr/local/etc/lighttpd
From now on, we will continue our work in this directory.
Lets say that we want to use ip 1.2.3.4
for domains example.com
, api.example.com
and book.example.com
.
sudo mkdir -p ./1.2.3.4:80/company sudo ln -s /home/company/www/cake ./1.2.3.4:80/company/cake sudo ln -s /home/company/www/vendors ./1.2.3.4:80/company/vendors sudo ln -s /home/company/www/mainsite ./1.2.3.4:80/company/example.com sudo mkdir ./1.2.3.4:80/product sudo ln -s /home/product/www/cake ./1.2.3.4:80/product/cake sudo ln -s /home/product/www/vendors ./1.2.3.4:80/product/vendors sudo ln -s /home/product/www/api ./1.2.3.4:80/product/api.example.com sudo ln -s /home/product/www/book ./1.2.3.4:80/product/book.example.com
What exactly did we just do? We created a folder named 1.2.3.4:80
, containing 2 subfolders company
and product
. These will be used as groups of virtual hosts - their names should be the same as the name of their home directory (by default, path for logs can be adjusted). We will use them for setting paths to log files later. Both company
and product
have a symlinked cake
and vendors
folders and symlinks named as real domains and pointing to our app folders.
Lets continue - ip 2.3.4:5:80
will be used for rest of the group product
.
sudo mkdir -p ./2.3.4.5:80/product sudo ln -s /home/product/www/cake ./2.3.4.5:80/product/cake sudo ln -s /home/product/www/vendors ./2.3.4.5:80/product/vendors sudo ln -s /home/product/www/product ./2.3.4.5:80/product/product.com
That means only one virtual host for now.
Ok, ip 3.4.5.6
is going to be used for the www
subdomains. No symlinks to existing applications are necessary here, because lighttpd will redirect requests coming to www.example.com
to example.com
automatically.
sudo mkdir -p ./3.4.5.6:80/company/www.example.com ./3.4.5.6:80/product/www.product.com
We just had to create ip:port directory for the socket, group(s) of www virtualhosts and some domain-based directories just to have something to point default virtual host of this group at.
Staging and development checkouts will all share one ip 4.5.6.7
.
sudo mkdir -p ./4.5.6.7:80/development sudo ln -s /home/development/www/cake ./4.5.6.7:80/development/cake sudo ln -s /home/development/www/vendors ./4.5.6.7:80/development/vendors sudo ln -s /home/development/www/mainsite ./4.5.6.7:80/development/dev-main.example.com sudo ln -s /home/development/www/product ./4.5.6.7:80/development/dev-product.example.com sudo mkdir ./4.5.6.7:80/staging sudo ln -s /home/staging/www/cake ./4.5.6.7:80/staging/cake sudo ln -s /home/staging/www/vendors ./4.5.6.7:80/staging/vendors sudo ln -s /home/staging/www/mainsite ./4.5.6.7:80/staging/stage-main.example.com sudo ln -s /home/staging/www/product ./4.5.6.7:80/staging/stage-product.example.com
Four virtual hosts on one ip from different home folders (therefore placed in different groups).
The hard part is complete. Lets go through the bothering part of this custom setup. Did I said already that everything is a file? Don't be scared from amount of necessary steps, it will all be worth it in the future.
Lets look what we have done in directory /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/
:
1.2.3.4:80/ company/ cake/ <-- /home/company/www/cake example.com/ <-- /home/company/www/mainsite vendors/ <-- /home/company/www/vendors product/ api.example.com/ <-- /home/product/www/api book.example.com/ <-- /home/product/www/book cake/ <-- /home/product/www/cake vendors/ <-- /home/product/www/vendors 2.3.4.5:80/ product/ cake/ <-- /home/product/www/cake product.com/ <-- /home/product/www/product vendors/ <-- /home/product/www/vendors 3.4.5.6:80/ company/www.example.com/ <-- empty directory (redirected), necessary for default virtual host product/www.product.com/ <-- empty directory (redirected), necessary for default virtual host 4.5.6:7:80/ development/ cake/ <-- /home/development/www/cake dev-main.example.com/ <-- /home/development/www/mainsite dev-product.example.com/ <-- /home/development/www/product vendors/ <-- /home/development/www/vendors staging/ cake/ <-- /home/staging/www/cake stage-main.example.com/ <-- /home/staging/www/mainsite stage-product.example.com/ <-- /home/staging/www/product vendors/ <-- /home/staging/www/vendors
Some new folders with symlinks.
Are you still with me? For those who know mod_simple_vhost
, you should be already be pretty clear where we are going. Besides the accesslog path and compress folder path, we will also switch simple-vhost.server-root
and simple-vhost.default-host
in dependency of used socket and some hostname condition for virthost group. Actually, there is a bit more as well that I will show you.
The above directory structure shows that we have 7 groups of virtual hosts in 4 sockets, so lets create 7 simple configuration files for our groups of virtual hosts. Configuration file for group is not required in very special case - no regex pattern for this group, only one virtual host inside and - either only group in socket, or (alphabetically) last one.
<?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/1.2.3.4:80/company/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^example\.com', 'default' => 'example.com' ); ?> <?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/1.2.3.4:80/product/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^(.*)\.example\.com', 'default' => 'book.example.com' ); ?> <?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/2.3.4.5:80/product/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^product\.com', 'default' => 'product.com' ); ?> <?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/3.4.5.6:80/company/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^(.*)\.example\.com', 'default' => 'www.example.com' ); ?> <?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/3.4.5.6:80/product/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^(.*)\.product\.com', 'default' => 'www.product.com' ); ?> <?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/4.5.6:7:80/development/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^dev-(.*)\.example\.com', 'default' => 'dev-main.example.com' ); ?> <?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/4.5.6:7:80/staging/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^stage-(.*)\.example\.com', 'default' => 'stage-main.example.com' ); ?>
And that's it. Every group (subfolder of ip.ad.dr.es:80 socket folder) has the required minimal configuration, and everything is properly set up. So lets see what we can take off from it.
Dynamic configuration
Extract this file in folder /usr/local/etc/lighttpd
.
sudo chmod a+x ./simple_config.php
Make simple_config.php
executable for everyone.
Now run it as a non-privileged user.
./simple_config.php | more
You should see a basic generated configuration for your sockets, virthosts and virthosts groups.
Now we are already looking at a snippet of the generated configuration.
# # Simple configuration parser output # # ERROR logfile /home/company/logs/example-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/example.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR logfile /home/product/logs/api-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/api.example.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR logfile /home/product/logs/book-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/book.example.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR logfile /home/product/logs/product-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/product.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR logfile /home/company/logs/www-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/www.example.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR logfile /home/product/logs/www-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/www.product.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR logfile /home/development/logs/dev-main-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/dev-main.example.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR logfile /home/development/logs/dev-product-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/dev-product.example.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR logfile /home/staging/logs/stage-main-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/stage-main.example.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR logfile /home/staging/logs/stage-product-access_log can not be created, SKIPPING # ERROR compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/stage-product.example.com/ can not be created, SKIPPING # $SERVER["socket"] == "1.2.3.4:80" { $HTTP["host"] =~ "^example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/1.2.3.4:80/company/" simple-vhost.default-host = "example.com" $HTTP["host"] == "example.com" { ....
You can see which files this script is trying to create. It will create all of them when you will run it as root once. But there are two things we would like to fix first: access logs /home/company/logs/www-access_log
and /home/product/logs/www-access_log
are generated for our redirected domains.
Lets redirect these logs to those used by domains example.com and product.com:
<?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/3.4.5.6:80/company/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^(.*)\.example\.com', 'default' => 'www.example.com' ); $config['virthosts'] = array( 'www.example.com' => array( 'log' => 'example' ) ); ?> <?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/3.4.5.6:80/product/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^(.*)\.product\.com', 'default' => 'www.product.com' ); $config['virthosts'] = array( 'www.product.com' => array( 'log' => 'product' ) ); ?>
Running ./simple_config.php
as unprivileged user again shows this script is no longer trying to create any www-access_log files. We will not care about directories for compressed content, they can be used later, but we will never serve different content on example.com and www.example.com, so it is logical that they share one log file. Every decent logfile parser can handle several domains in one log file.
Now, you can run this script as root:
sudo ./simple_config.php
and result will look much better now:
# # Simple configuration parser output # # NOTICE created logfile /home/company/logs/example-access_log # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/example.com/ # NOTICE created logfile /home/product/logs/api-access_log # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/api.example.com/ # NOTICE created logfile /home/product/logs/book-access_log # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/book.example.com/ # NOTICE created logfile /home/product/logs/product-access_log # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/product.com/ # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/www.example.com/ # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/www.product.com/ # NOTICE created logfile /home/development/logs/dev-main-access_log # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/dev-main.example.com/ # NOTICE created logfile /home/development/logs/dev-product-access_log # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/dev-product.example.com/ # NOTICE created logfile /home/staging/logs/stage-main-access_log # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/stage-main.example.com/ # NOTICE created logfile /home/staging/logs/stage-product-access_log # NOTICE created compress cache /var/cache/lighttpd/compress/stage-product.example.com/ # $SERVER["socket"] == "1.2.3.4:80" { $HTTP["host"] =~ "^example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/1.2.3.4:80/company/" simple-vhost.default-host = "example.com" $HTTP["host"] == "example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/company/logs/example-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/example.com/" } } else $HTTP["host"] =~ "^(.*)\.example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/1.2.3.4:80/product/" simple-vhost.default-host = "book.example.com" $HTTP["host"] == "api.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/product/logs/api-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/api.example.com/" } else $HTTP["host"] == "book.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/product/logs/book-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/book.example.com/" } } } $SERVER["socket"] == "2.3.4.5:80" { $HTTP["host"] =~ "^product\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/2.3.4.5:80/product/" simple-vhost.default-host = "product.com" $HTTP["host"] == "product.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/product/logs/product-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/product.com/" } } } $SERVER["socket"] == "3.4.5.6:80" { $HTTP["host"] =~ "^(.*)\.example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/3.4.5.6:80/company/" simple-vhost.default-host = "www.example.com" $HTTP["host"] == "www.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/company/logs/example-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/www.example.com/" } } else $HTTP["host"] =~ "^(.*)\.product\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/3.4.5.6:80/product/" simple-vhost.default-host = "www.product.com" $HTTP["host"] == "www.product.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/product/logs/product-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/www.product.com/" } } } $SERVER["socket"] == "4.5.6.7:80" { $HTTP["host"] =~ "^dev-(.*)\.example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/4.5.6.7:80/development/" simple-vhost.default-host = "dev-main.example.com" $HTTP["host"] == "dev-main.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/development/logs/dev-main-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/dev-main.example.com/" } else $HTTP["host"] == "dev-product.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/development/logs/dev-product-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/dev-product.example.com/" } } else $HTTP["host"] =~ "^stage-(.*)\.example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/4.5.6.7:80/staging/" simple-vhost.default-host = "stage-main.example.com" $HTTP["host"] == "stage-main.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/staging/logs/stage-main-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/stage-main.example.com/" } else $HTTP["host"] == "stage-product.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/staging/logs/stage-product-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/stage-product.example.com/" } } }
Getting close to what we need from this setup.
I will process several steps now, and then I will paste here final output of config parser for you to compare with above one.
We have another domain manual.example.com
(with no virthost set) and we want to redirect it to api.example.com
with configuration only, it will be using its own manual-access_log
. Furthermore, we want book.example.com
condition happen sooner then the condition on api.example.com
, because book is gaining more traffic, and attach domain aliases bibliotheca.example.com
and bookstore.example.com
to book.example.com. Also, expire headers for book should be set for 2 years and as previously mentioned api.example.com is not using /webroot/
folder.
<?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/1.2.3.4:80/product/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^(.*)\.example\.com', 'default' => 'book.example.com' ); $config['virthosts'] = array( 'book.example.com' => array( 'expire' => array( '^(/css/|/files/|/img/|/js/|/images/|/themed/|/favicon.ico)' => 'access 2 years' ), 'aliases' => array( 'bibliotheca.example.com', 'bookstore.example.com' ) ), 'api.example.com' => array( 'webroot' => '/' ), 'manual.example.com' => array( 'redirect' => 'http://api.example.org/' ) ); ?>
All of it is fixed now. We even do not need folder/symlink for manual.example.com
in this case.
Important note: we do not have to create folders for domains bibliotheca.example.com
and bookstore.example.com
, because they are aliases for book.example.com
and it is used as default virtual host for this group! If you will set alias for non-default virtual host, you have to symlink aliased application several times to group folder - every time with a different domain name.
We want all staging sites to store logs in /home/development/logs
. Also all staging and development sites should use expire headers for 5 minutes only and have to use http auth (one common file for now).
<?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/4.5.6:7:80/development/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^dev-(.*)\.example\.com', 'default' => 'dev-main.example.com', 'expire' => array( '^(/css/|/files/|/img/|/js/|/images/|/themed/|/favicon.ico)' => 'access 5 minutes' ), 'auth' => array( 'backend' => 'htpasswd', 'file' => '/var/projects/company/.trac.htpasswd', 'protect' => array( '/' => array( 'realm' => 'Development Access', 'require' => 'valid-user' ) ) ) ); ?> <?php # /usr/local/etc/lighttpd/4.5.6:7:80/staging/config.php $config['group'] = array( 'host' => '^stage-(.*)\.example\.com', 'default' => 'stage-main.example.com', 'expire' => array( '^(/css/|/files/|/img/|/js/|/images/|/themed/|/favicon.ico)' => 'access 5 minutes' ), 'logs' => '/home/development/logs', 'auth' => array( 'backend' => 'htpasswd', 'file' => '/var/projects/company/.trac.htpasswd', 'protect' => array( '/' => array( 'realm' => 'Staging Access', 'require' => 'valid-user' ) ) ) ); ?>
This has all been fixed now.
Now our simple_config.php returns this:
# # Simple configuration parser output # $SERVER["socket"] == "1.2.3.4:80" { $HTTP["host"] =~ "^example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/1.2.3.4:80/company/" simple-vhost.default-host = "example.com" $HTTP["host"] == "example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/company/logs/example-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/example.com/" } } else $HTTP["host"] =~ "^(.*)\.example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/1.2.3.4:80/product/" simple-vhost.default-host = "book.example.com" $HTTP["host"] =~ "^(book\.example\.com|bibliotheca\.example\.com|bookstore\.example\.com)" { accesslog.filename = "/home/product/logs/book-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/book.example.com/" $HTTP["url"] =~ "^(/css/|/files/|/img/|/js/|/images/|/themed/|/favicon.ico)" { expire.url = ("" => "access 2 years") } } else $HTTP["host"] == "api.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/product/logs/api-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/api.example.com/" simple-vhost.document-root = "/" } else $HTTP["host"] == "manual.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/product/logs/manual-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/manual.example.com/" url.redirect = ( ".*" => "http://api.example.org/" ) } } } $SERVER["socket"] == "2.3.4.5:80" { $HTTP["host"] =~ "^product\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/2.3.4.5:80/product/" simple-vhost.default-host = "product.com" $HTTP["host"] == "product.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/product/logs/product-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/product.com/" } } } $SERVER["socket"] == "3.4.5.6:80" { $HTTP["host"] =~ "^(.*)\.example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/3.4.5.6:80/company/" simple-vhost.default-host = "www.example.com" $HTTP["host"] == "www.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/company/logs/example-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/www.example.com/" } } else $HTTP["host"] =~ "^(.*)\.product\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/3.4.5.6:80/product/" simple-vhost.default-host = "www.product.com" $HTTP["host"] == "www.product.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/product/logs/product-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/www.product.com/" } } } $SERVER["socket"] == "4.5.6.7:80" { $HTTP["host"] =~ "^dev-(.*)\.example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/4.5.6.7:80/development/" simple-vhost.default-host = "dev-main.example.com" $HTTP["url"] =~ "^(/css/|/files/|/img/|/js/|/images/|/themed/|/favicon.ico)" { expire.url = ("" => "access 5 minutes") } auth.backend = "htpasswd" auth.backend.htpasswd.userfile = "/var/projects/company/.trac.htpasswd" auth.require = ( "/" => ( "method" => "basic", "realm" => "Development Access", "require" => "valid-user" ) ) $HTTP["host"] == "dev-main.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/development/logs/dev-main-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/dev-main.example.com/" } else $HTTP["host"] == "dev-product.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/development/logs/dev-product-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/dev-product.example.com/" } } else $HTTP["host"] =~ "^stage-(.*)\.example\.com" { simple-vhost.server-root = "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/4.5.6.7:80/staging/" simple-vhost.default-host = "stage-main.example.com" $HTTP["url"] =~ "^(/css/|/files/|/img/|/js/|/images/|/themed/|/favicon.ico)" { expire.url = ("" => "access 5 minutes") } auth.backend = "htpasswd" auth.backend.htpasswd.userfile = "/var/projects/company/.trac.htpasswd" auth.require = ( "/" => ( "method" => "basic", "realm" => "Staging Access", "require" => "valid-user" ) ) $HTTP["host"] == "stage-main.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/development/logs/stage-main-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/stage-main.example.com/" } else $HTTP["host"] == "stage-product.example.com" { accesslog.filename = "/home/development/logs/stage-product-access_log" compress.cache-dir = "/var/cache/lighttpd/compress/stage-product.example.com/" } } }
Now it looks like we are set with everything we needed.
One last line for /usr/local/etc/lighttpd.conf
is:
include_shell "/usr/local/etc/lighttpd/simple_config.php"
And that's all.
Before you will start or restart lighttpd, try and see if it can parse the new configuration (with our include) without errors, or inspect how it sees configuration after parsing:
lighttpd -t -f /usr/local/etc/lighttpd.conf lighttpd -p -f /usr/local/etc/lighttpd.conf
It is better to run the above commands as root, off course.
Now what?
Think twice about patterns for groups - don't be surprised if you get 'It works' page or default virthost of another group, if you are too lazy to read the generated configuration! Groups are processed in alphabetical order - just so you know which patterns are going to be checked first. Well, it is possible to change order of groups - change name of some company
group folder to xxx_company
and:
$config['group'] = array( 'name' => 'company',
Now you should be fine - this group in folder named xxx_company instead of company, and everything will still work.
Everything that is necessary should be up and running now. Lighttpd should serve all virtual hosts from groups in sockets from now on. Read how to clear cache for mod_compress too. Smart brain should ask now, why we are using mod_simple_vhost
, if our parser generates configuration for every virtual host it founds in our configuration files and directory structure. We don't do it, but you can - read code. Note for these who do not want or can not follow our default logs location, home directories, cache directories, user account lighttpd will use, or want to store directory structure with sockets/groups/virthosts somewhere else - read code too ;-) Reason why we set mod_simple_vhost
for this example as default is simple - to get some domain serving some application, we need only one simple thing: symlink to app directory with domain name, placed in some virtual group in proper socket. This virtual host will be accessible immediately - although, restart of webserver is still necessary to have configuration for access logfile and compress directory for this virtual host (otherwise default accesslog and compress dir will be used), but not required.
A few questions remain, what and how needs to be done in obvious use cases - adding new ip addresses, groups, virthosts, or moving whole groups over sockets, moving virthosts over sockets, etc... I assume this part will be sweet piece of cake for you. Definitely - feel free to call simple_config.php
as often as you want to. It is highly reccommended to save functional configuration to a backup file by redirecting the output. Sure, one can use include "/some/path/generated_output.conf"
exclusively, instead of include_shell
- it is up to you.
Backup, backup, backup. This is nothing more then a functional example, but the entire code lives in one class, so feel free to change or extend it for your needs. It is released under MIT license and is provided as it is, so you can do anything you want with it (except for removing license and copyright note). Keep in mind it was not tested in all possible situations and some of things I did not mention in this tutorial (but they are implemented in code) were not intensively tested yet.
If you feel that some of the subdomains used in this tutorial sound familiar to you, you are probably right. I didn't said it was going to be a fairy tale. I said, I will tell you a story. To be continued...