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Revision 38 (Anonymous, 2008-06-13 08:50) → Revision 39/98 (Conrad.Irwin, 2008-07-23 10:34)

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 {{{ 
 #!rst 
 ===================== 
 the FastCGI Interface 
 ===================== 

 ------------------- 
 Module: mod_fastcgi 
 ------------------- 

 .. meta:: 
   :keywords: lighttpd, FastCGI 
  
 .. contents:: Table of Contents 

 Description 
 =========== 

 lighttpd provides an interface to external programs that  
 support the FastCGI interface. The FastCGI Interface is  
 defined by http://www.fastcgi.com/ and is a  
 platform-independent and server-independent interface between 
 a web-application and a webserver. 

 This means that FastCGI programs that run with the Apache  
 webserver will run seamlessly with lighttpd and vice versa. 


 FastCGI 
 ------- 

 **Warning:** As of php 5.2.3, the cgi binary is installed as "/usr/local/bin/php-cgi" by default, instead of "/usr/local/bin/php". Make sure to substitute the relevant parts in the documentation below. 

 FastCGI removes a lot of the limitations of CGI programs.  
 CGI programs have the problem that they have to be restarted  
 by the webserver for every request which leads to really bad  
 performance values. 

 FastCGI removes this limitation by keeping the process running  
 and handling the requests by this always running process. This  
 removes the time used for the fork() and the overall startup  
 and cleanup time which is necessary to create and destroy a  
 process. 

 While CGI programs communicate to the server over pipes,  
 FastCGI processes use Unix-Domain-Sockets or TCP/IP to talk  
 with the webserver. This gives you the second advantage over  
 simple CGI programs: FastCGI don't have to run on the webserver 
 itself but anywhere in the network.  

 lighttpd takes it a little bit further by providing an internal  
 FastCGI load-balancer which can be used to balance the load  
 over multiple FastCGI Servers. In contrast to other solutions  
 only the FastCGI process has to be on the cluster and not the  
 whole webserver. That gives the FastCGI process more resources 
 than a e.g. *load-balancer+apache+mod_php* solution. 

 If you compare FastCGI against an *apache+mod_php* setup you  
 should note that FastCGI provides additional security as the  
 FastCGI process can be run under different permissions than  
 the webserver and can also live in a chroot which might be  
 different than the one the webserver is running in.  

 Options 
 ======= 

 lighttpd provides the FastCGI support via the fastcgi-module  
 (mod_fastcgi) which provides 3 options in the config-file: 

 * fastcgi.debug: a value between 0 and 65535 to set the debug-level in the FastCGI module. Currently only 0 and 1 are used. Use 1 to enable some debug output, 0 to disable it. 

 Example: :: 

     fastcgi.debug = 1 

 * fastcgi.map-extensions: map multiple extensions to the same fastcgi server 

   Example: :: 

     fastcgi.map-extensions = ( ".php3" => ".php" ) 

 * fastcgi.server: tell the module where to send FastCGI requests to. Every file-extension can have it own handler. Load-Balancing is done by specifying multiple handlers for the same extension. 
  
   structure of fastcgi.server section: :: 
  
     ( <extension> =>  
       (   
         ( "host" => <string> , 
           "port" => <integer> , 
	   "socket" => <string>,                   # either socket or host+port 
	   "bin-path" => <string>,                 # optional  
	   "bin-environment" => <array>,           # optional  
	   "bin-copy-environment" => <array>,      # optional  
           "mode" => <string>,                     # optional 
           "docroot" => <string> ,                 # optional if "mode" is not "authorizer" 
           "check-local" => <string>,              # optional 
	   "min-procs" => <integer>,               # optional 
	   "max-procs" => <integer>,               # optional - when omitted, default is 4 
	   "max-load-per-proc" => <integer>,       # optional used for adaptive spawning of fcgi processes for versions below 1.3.14 
	   "idle-timeout" => <integer>,            # optional 
	   "broken-scriptfilename" => <boolean>, # optional 
           "disable-time" => <integer>,            # optional 
           "allow-x-send-file" => <boolean>,       # optional 
           "kill-signal" => <integer>,             # optional (v1.4.14+ though option is accepted in earlier versions) 
	 ), 
         ( "host" => ...  
         )  
       ) 
     ) 
  
 * <extension>: is the file-extension or prefix (if started with "/") 
 * "host":        is hostname/ip of the FastCGI process 
 * "port":        is tcp-port on the "host" used by the FastCGI process 
 * "bin-path":    path to the local FastCGI binary which should be started if no local FastCGI is running 
 * "socket":      path to the unix-domain socket 
 * "mode":        is the FastCGI protocol mode. Default is "responder", also "authorizer" mode is implemented. 
 * "docroot":     is optional and is the docroot on the remote host for default "responder" mode. For "authorizer" mode it is MANDATORY and it points to docroot for authorized requests. For security reasons it is recommended to keep this docroot outside of server.document-root tree. 
 * "check-local": is optional and may be "enable" (default) or "disable". If enabled the server first checks for a file in local *server.document-root* tree and returns 404 (Not Found) if no such file, and does not fall back to FastCGI. If disabled, the server forwards a request to the FastCGI interface without this check. 
 * "broken-scriptfilename": breaks *SCRIPT_FILENAME* in a way that PHP can extract *PATH_INFO* from it (default: disabled) 
 * "disable-time": time to wait before a disabled backend is checked again 
 * "allow-x-send-file": controls if *X-LIGHTTPD-send-file* and *X-Sendfile* headers are allowed  

   If bin-path is set: 

 * "min-procs": sets the minimum processes to start 
 * "max-procs": the upper limit of the processes to start 
 * "max-load-per-proc": maximum number of fastcgi waiting processes that will be started on average per process before a new process is spawned for versions below 1.3.14 
 * "idle-timeout": number of seconds before a unused process gets terminated 
 * "bin-environment": put an entry into the environment of the started process 
 * "bin-copy-environment": clean up the environment and copy only the specified entries into the fresh environment of the spawn process 


   New in 1.4.14: 
 * "kill-signal": By default lighttpd send *SIGTERM(15)* to FastCGI processes, which were spawned by lighttpd. Applications, which link libfcgi_, need to be killed with *SIGUSR1(10)*. This applies to php <5.2.1, lua-magnet_ and others. Option is accepted in prior versions, option is functional in 1.4.14+. 


 Examples 
 -------- 

   Multiple extensions for the same host: :: 
  
     fastcgi.server = ( ".php" => 
       (( "host" => "127.0.0.1",  
          "port" => 1026, 
	  "bin-path" => "/usr/local/bin/php" 
       )), 
       ".php4" => 
       (( "host" => "127.0.0.1", 
	  "port" => 1026 
       )) 
     ) 

   Example with prefix: :: 
  
     fastcgi.server = ( "/remote_scripts/" => 
       (( "host" => "192.168.0.3", 
	  "port" => 9000, 
          "check-local" => "disable", 
          "docroot" => "/" # remote server may use  
	                   # it's own docroot 
       )) 
     ) 
		     
   The request "http://my.example.org/remote_scripts/test.cgi" will 
   be forwarded to fastcgi server at "192.168.0.3" and the value 
   "/remote_scripts/test.cgi" will be used for the *SCRIPT_NAME* 
   variable. Remote server may prepend it with its own  
   document root. The handling of index files is also the  
   responsibility of remote server for this case. 

   In the case that the prefix is not terminated with a slash,  
   the prefix will be handled as file and "/test.cgi" would become 
   a *PATH_INFO* instead of part of *SCRIPT_NAME*. 


   Example for "authorizer" mode: :: 
  
     fastcgi.server = ( "/remote_scripts/" => 
       (( "host" => "10.0.0.2", 
	  "port" => 9000, 
          "docroot" => "/path_to_private_docs", 
          "mode" => "authorizer" 
       )) 
     ) 

   Note that if "docroot" is specified then its value will be  
   used in *DOCUMENT_ROOT* and *SCRIPT_FILENAME* variables passed 
   to FastCGI server. 

 Load-Balancing 
 ============== 

 The FastCGI plugin provides automatically a load-balancing between  
 multiple FastCGI servers. :: 

   fastcgi.server = ( ".php" =>  
      (( "host" => "10.0.0.2", "port" => 1030 ), 
       ( "host" => "10.0.0.3", "port" => 1030 )) 
     ) 


 To understand how the load-balancing works you can enable the  
 *fastcgi.debug* option and will get a similar output as here: :: 

   proc: 127.0.0.1 1031    1 1 1 31454 
   proc: 127.0.0.1 1028    1 1 1 31442 
   proc: 127.0.0.1 1030    1 1 1 31449 
   proc: 127.0.0.1 1029    1 1 2 31447 
   proc: 127.0.0.1 1026    1 1 2 31438 
   got proc: 34 31454 
   release proc: 40 31438 
   proc: 127.0.0.1 1026    1 1 1 31438 
   proc: 127.0.0.1 1028    1 1 1 31442 
   proc: 127.0.0.1 1030    1 1 1 31449 
   proc: 127.0.0.1 1031    1 1 2 31454 
   proc: 127.0.0.1 1029    1 1 2 31447 

 Even if this for multiple FastCGI children on the local machine  
 the following explanation is valid for remote connections too. 

 The output shows:  

 - IP, port, unix-socket (is empty here) 
 - is-local, state (0 - unset, 1 - running, ... ) 
 - active connections (load) 
 - PID 

 As you can see the list is always sorted by the load field.  

 Whenever a new connection is requested, the first entry (the one  
 with the lowest load) is selected, the load is increased (got proc: ...)  
 and the list is sorted again. 

 If a FastCGI request is done or the connection is dropped, the load on the  
 FastCGI proc decreases and the list is sorted again (release proc: ...) 

 This behaviour is very light-weight in code and still very efficient  
 as it keeps the fastcgi-servers equally loaded even if they have different  
 CPUs.  

 Adaptive Process Spawning 
 ========================= 

 .. note:: This feature is is no longer available as of 1.3.14. There is no replacement. min-procs is simply ignored. 

 Versions 1.3.8    to 1.3.14 of lighttpd can spawn processes on demand if  
 a bin-path is specified and the FastCGI process runs locally. 

 If you want to have a least one FastCGI process running and  
 more of the number of requests increases you can use min-procs  
 and max-procs. 

 A new process is spawned as soon as the average number of  
 requests waiting to be handle by a single process increases the 
 max-load-per-proc setting.  

 The idle-timeout specifies how long a fastcgi-process should wait 
 for a new request before it kills itself.  

 Example 
 ------- 
 :: 

   fastcgi.server = ( ".php" =>  
     (( "socket" => "/tmp/php.socket", 
        "bin-path" => "/usr/local/bin/php", 
        "min-procs" => 1, 
        "max-procs" => 32, 
        "max-load-per-proc" => 4, 
        "idle-timeout" => 20  
     )) 
    ) 

 Disabling Adaptive Spawning 
 --------------------------- 

 Adaptive Spawning is a quite new feature and it might misbehave  
 for your setup. There are several ways to control how the spawning  
 is done: 

 1. ""max-load-per-proc" => 1" 
    if that works for you, great. 
   
 2. If not set "min-procs == max-procs". 
   
 3. For PHP you can also use: :: 
   
      $ PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN=384 ./lighttpd -f ./lighttpd.conf 
     
      fastcgi.server = ( ".php" =>  
  	 (( "socket" => "/tmp/php.socket", 
            "bin-path" => "/usr/local/bin/php", 
            "min-procs" => 1, 
	    "max-procs" => 1, 
            "max-load-per-proc" => 4, 
            "idle-timeout" => 20  
         )) 
       ) 
   
    It will create one socket and let's PHP create the 384 processes itself. 

 4. If you don't want lighttpd to manage the fastcgi processes, remove the 
    bin-path and use "spawn-fcgi" to spawn them itself. 


 FastCGI and Programming Languages 
 ================================= 		

 Preparing PHP as a FastCGI program 
 ---------------------------------- 

 One of the most important application that has a FastCGI  
 interface is php which can be downloaded from  
 http://www.php.net/ . You have to recompile the php from  
 source to enable the FastCGI interface as it is normally  
 not enabled by default in the distributions. 

 If you already have a working installation of PHP on a  
 webserver execute a small script which just contains :: 

   <?php phpinfo(); ?> 

 and search for the line in that contains the configure call.  
 You can use it as the base for the compilation.  

 You have to remove all occurrences of `--with-apxs`, `--with-apxs2`  
 and the like which would build PHP with Apache support.    Add the 
 next three switches to compile PHP with FastCGI support:: 

   $ ./configure \ 
     --enable-fastcgi \ 
     --enable-force-cgi-redirect \ 
     ... 
  
 After compilation and installation check that your PHP  
 binary contains FastCGI support by calling: :: 

   $ php -v 
   PHP 4.3.3RC2-dev (cgi-fcgi) (built: Oct 19 2003 23:19:17) 

 The important part is the (cgi-fcgi). 


 Starting a FastCGI-PHP 
 ---------------------- 

 Starting with version 1.3.6 lighttpd can spawn the FastCGI  
 processes locally itself if necessary: :: 

   fastcgi.server = ( ".php" => 
     (( "socket" => "/tmp/php-fastcgi.socket", 
        "bin-path" => "/usr/local/bin/php" 
     )) 
   ) 

 PHP provides 2 special environment variables which control the number of 
 spawned workers under the control of a single watching process 
 (PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN) and the number of requests what a single worker 
 handles before it kills itself. :: 

   fastcgi.server = ( ".php" => 
      (( "socket" => "/tmp/php-fastcgi.socket", 
         "bin-path" => "/usr/local/bin/php", 
         "bin-environment" => (  
           "PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN" => "16", 
           "PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS" => "10000" 
         ) 
      )) 
    ) 

 To increase the security of the started process you should only pass  
 the necessary environment variables to the FastCGI process. :: 

   fastcgi.server = ( ".php" => 
      (( "socket" => "/tmp/php-fastcgi.socket", 
         "bin-path" => "/usr/local/bin/php", 
         "bin-environment" => (  
            "PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN" => "16", 
            "PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS" => "10000" ), 
         "bin-copy-environment" => ( 
	    "PATH", "SHELL", "USER" ) 
      )) 
    ) 

 Configuring PHP 
 --------------- 

 If you want to use PATH_INFO and PHP_SELF in you PHP scripts you have to 
 configure php and lighttpd. The php.ini needs the option: :: 

   cgi.fix_pathinfo = 1 

 and the option "broken-scriptfilename" in your fastcgi.server config: :: 

   fastcgi.server = ( ".php" => 
      (( "socket" => "/tmp/php-fastcgi.socket", 
         "bin-path" => "/usr/local/bin/php", 
         "bin-environment" => (  
           "PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN" => "16", 
           "PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS" => "10000" ), 
         "bin-copy-environment" => ( 
           "PATH", "SHELL", "USER" ), 
         "broken-scriptfilename" => "enable" 
      )) 
    ) 

 Why this ? the "cgi.fix_pathinfo = 0" would give you a working *PATH_INFO*  
 but no *PHP_SELF*. If you enable it, it turns around. To fix the 
 *PATH_INFO* `--enable-discard-path` needs a *SCRIPT_FILENAME* which is against the CGI spec, a 
 broken-scriptfilename. With "cgi.fix_pathinfo = 1" in php.ini and 
 "broken-scriptfilename => "enable"" you get both. 

 Please note that the CGI binary has been renamed to php-cgi in 5.2.3, so you'll probably have a path like /usr/local/bin/php-cgi in your config. 

 Roadsend PHP -- The Other PHP 
 ----------------------------- 

 Roadsend PHP, freely available from http://code.roadsend.com/pcc, is an alternative implementation of PHP that works with lighttpd. It can run PHP code directly (as Zend PHP does), but it can also compile PHP code directly to native FastCGI binaries. 

 An example configuration that can be used for interpreting .php files on your server with Roadsend PHP: :: 

      fastcgi.server = ( ".php" => 
                          ( "localhost" => 
                              ( 
                                "host"          =>       "127.0.0.1", 
                                "port"          =>       1026, 
                                "bin-path"      =>       "/opt/roadsend/pcc/modules/fastcgi/pcc.fcgi", 
                              ) 
                          ) 
                       ) 

 To deploy a compiled application, you will need mod_rewrite enabled in your lighttpd server. Assuming your app is named "myapp", copy the compiled app "myapp.fcgi" and associated library "libmyapp_u.so" created by pcc to your cgi-bin directory: 

      cp myapp.fcgi libmyapp_u.so /usr/lib/cgi-bin/ 

 We use the mod_rewrite module to grab all requests for PHP files in the application's web root directory and re-route them to the FastCGI binary. We also allow for an index.php file :: 
     
      # serve index pages 
      url.rewrite-once = ( "^/myapp/$" => "/myapp/index.php" ) 
     
      # main fastcgi entry 
      $HTTP["url"] =~ "^/myapp/.+\.php$" { 
     
              fastcgi.server = ( 
                       "/myapp" => 
                                   ( "localhost" => 
                                              ( "bin-path" => "/var/www/localhost/cgi-bin/myapp.fcgi", 
                                                 "docroot" => "/var/www/localhost/htdocs/myapp", 
                                                 "host"                 =>                "127.0.0.1", 
                                                 "port"                 =>                1026, 
                                                 "check-local" => "disable" 
                                              ) 
                                      ) 
                              ) 
     
      } # HTTP[url] 


 External Spawning 
 ----------------- 

 Spawning FastCGI processes directly in the webserver has some  
 disadvantages like 

 - FastCGI process can only run locally 
 - has the same permissions as the webserver 
 - has the same base-dir as the webserver 

 As soon as you are using a separate FastCGI Server to 
 take off some load from the webserver you have to control 
 the FastCGI process by a external program like "spawn-fcgi". 

 "spawn-fcgi" is used to start a FastCGI process in its own 
 environment and set the user-id, group-id and change to  
 another root-directory (chroot). 

 For convenience a wrapper script should be used which takes  
 care of all the necessary option. Such a script in included  
 in the lighttpd distribution and is call spawn-php.sh. 

 The script has a set of config variables you should take  
 a look at: :: 

   ## ABSOLUTE path to the spawn-fcgi binary 
   SPAWNFCGI="/usr/local/sbin/spawn-fcgi" 

   ## ABSOLUTE path to the PHP binary 
   FCGIPROGRAM="/usr/local/bin/php" 

   ## bind to tcp-port on localhost 
   FCGIPORT="1026" 

   ## bind to unix domain socket 
   # FCGISOCKET="/tmp/php.sock" 
   ## number of PHP childs to spawn 
   PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN=10 

   ## number of request server by a single php-process until 
   ## is will be restarted 
   PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS=1000 

   ## IP adresses where PHP should access server connections 
   ## from 
   FCGI_WEB_SERVER_ADDRS="127.0.0.1,192.168.0.1" 

   # allowed environment variables separated by spaces 
   ALLOWED_ENV="ORACLE_HOME PATH USER" 

   ## if this script is run as root switch to the following user 
   USERID=wwwrun 
   GROUPID=wwwrun 

 If you have set the variables to values that fit to your  
 setup you can start it by calling: :: 

   $ spawn-php.sh 
   spawn-fcgi.c.136: child spawned successfully: PID: 6925 

 If you get "child spawned successfully: PID:" the php  
 processes could be started successfully. You should see them  
 in your process list: :: 

   $ ps ax | grep php 
   6925 ?          S        0:00 /usr/local/bin/php 
   6928 ?          S        0:00 /usr/local/bin/php 
   ... 

 The number of processes should be *PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN* + 1.  
 Here the process 6925 is the master of the slaves which  
 handle the work in parallel. Number of parallel workers can  
 be set by *PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN*. A worker dies automaticly of  
 handling *PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS* requests as PHP might have  
 memory leaks. 

 If you start the script as user root php processes will be  
 running as the user *USERID* and group *GROUPID* to drop the  
 root permissions. Otherwise the php processes will run as  
 the user you started script as. 

 As the script might be started from a unknown stage or even  
 directly from the command-line it cleans the environment  
 before starting the processes. *ALLOWED_ENV* contains all  
 the external environement variables that should be available  
 to the php-process. 

 A patch for "spawn-fcgi" so that it can accept a custom configuration file location can be found here: 

 http://forum.lighttpd.net/topic/446#1294 

 The patch must be applied in the source directory of lighttpd's source code. The file to patch is "spawn-fcgi.c" and requires a recompile of lighty to have the binary compiled with it as well. 

 It is required to add the following in the "spawn-php.sh" file: :: 

   ## ABSOLUTE path to PHP config 
   FCGI_CONFIG="/path/to/php/config/php5.ini" 

 After: :: 

   ## ABSOLUTE path to the PHP binary 
   FCGIPROGRAM="/etc/lighttpd/php" 

 And change the similar lines at the bottom of the file to: :: 

   if test x$UID = x0; then 
     EX="$SPAWNFCGI -p $FCGIPORT -f $FCGIPROGRAM -u $USERID -g $GROUPID -C $PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN -x $FCGI_CONFIG" 
   else 
     EX="$SPAWNFCGI -p $FCGIPORT -f $FCGIPROGRAM -C $PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN -x $FCGI_CONFIG" 
   fi 

 Perl 
 ---- 

 For Perl you have to install the FCGI module from CPAN. 

 Skeleton for remote authorizer 
 ============================== 

 The basic functionality of authorizer is as follows (see 
 http://www.fastcgi.com/devkit/doc/fcgi-spec.html, 6.3 for  
 details). :: 

   #include <fcgi_stdio.h> 
   #include <stdlib.h> 
   #include <unistd.h> 
   int main () { 
     char* p; 
  
     while (FCGI_Accept() >= 0) {    
       /* wait for fastcgi authorizer request */ 
  
       printf("Content-type: text/html\r\n"); 
  
       if ((p = getenv("QUERY_STRING")) == NULL) || 
            <QUERY_STRING is unauthorized>) 
            printf("Status: 403 Forbidden\r\n\r\n"); 

       else printf("\r\n");   
         /* default Status is 200 - allow access */ 
     } 
  
     return 0; 
   } 

 It is possible to use any other variables provided by  
 FastCGI interface for authorization check. Here is only an  
 example. 


 Troubleshooting 
 =============== 

 fastcgi.debug should be enabled for troubleshooting. 

 If you get: :: 

   (fcgi.c.274) connect delayed:    8 
   (fcgi.c.289) connect succeeded:    8 
   (fcgi.c.745) unexpected end-of-file (perhaps the fastcgi  
      process died):    8 

 the fastcgi process accepted the connection but closed it  
 right away. This happens if *FCGI_WEB_SERVER_ADDRS* doesn't  
 include the host where you are connection from. 

 If you get :: 

   (fcgi.c.274) connect delayed:    7 
   (fcgi.c.1107) error: unexpected close of fastcgi connection  
      for /peterp/seite1.php (no fastcgi process on host/port ?) 
   (fcgi.c.1015) emergency exit: fastcgi: connection-fd: 5  
      fcgi-fd: 7 

 the fastcgi process is not running on the host/port you are  
 connection to. Check your configuration. 

 If you get :: 

   (fcgi.c.274) connect delayed:    7 
   (fcgi.c.289) connect succeeded:    7 

 everything is fine. The connect() call just was delayed a  
 little bit and is completely normal. 

 .. _libfcgi: http://www.fastcgi.com/ 
 .. _lua-magnet: http://jan.kneschke.de/projects/lua 
 }}} 

 ---- 

 Some Python (perhaps Flup) information would be nice..