In my previous post, Docker PHP/PHP-FPM Configuration via Environment Variables I introduced my new PHP image that uses environment variables to configure its INI settings.

The Dockerfile is a beast, to be sure. At over 650 lines it documents my attempt at bringing true flexibility to an immutable PHP image.

With it, you can set any number of PHP INI settings without having to rebuild your image:

$ docker container run --rm \ -e PHP.error_reporting = -1 \ jtreminio/php:7.2 php -i | \ grep error_reporting error_reporting = > -1 = > -1

As part of my aim for immutability, I install all of the available modules in Ondřej Surý’s great PHP PPA.

This increases the final Docker image size by quite a bit, but in reality file size should not be in your list of top concerns. Ease of deployment, repeatability and speed of spinning up a new instance should top your list.

While my PHP image hit these three spot-on, it did introduce another issue: loading all the available PHP modules would slow the engine down, or introduce small incompatibilities and bugs to your code that you were not expecting.

If you are not doing any image work, do you really need to have the GD or Imagick modules enabled?

More clearly, why have the Redis or Mongodb modules enabled if you ever only work with MySQL?

Why Not Use Environment Variables To Load Modules?

The php.ini file included with my PHP images looks like this:

allow_url_fopen = ${PHP.allow_url_fopen} allow_url_include = ${PHP.allow_url_include}

This works because I have pre-defined all the variables to be used as environment variables:

ENV PHP.allow_url_fopen=1 \ PHP.allow_url_include = \

If a user does not pass PHP.allow_url_fopen to the Docker image, it defaults to 1 , and PHP.allow_url_include defaults to no value.

I am forced to pre-define values because some INI settings will crash the PHP engine if left empty. They must have a non-empty value.

Likewise, PHP modules are loaded as:

extension = redis.so

Leaving this setting blank will immediately crash PHP. You cannot simply try to not load redis.so by leaving the setting as extension= .

If you decide to break immutability in your Docker images and delete the INI files that have these extension=* lines in them, you may run into other problems like having to set up an entry-point directive in your Dockerfile to delete these files on startup, or if you want your PHP-FPM service to have Redis disabled but may want to use it for PHP-CLI.

Removing the need to change the container’s filesystem was the main purpose behind going with configuration-by-environment-variables in the first place, and this implementation only accomplishes half that.

Meet PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR

When compiling PHP you tell it where to find the default php.ini file and you can also define where it should scan for any additional INI files.

In Ondřej Surý’s build the additional files path is set to /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d for CLI:

$ docker container run -it --rm \ jtreminio/php:7.2 php --ini Configuration File ( php.ini ) Path: /etc/php/7.2/cli Loaded Configuration File: /etc/php/7.2/cli/php.ini Scan for additional .ini files in: /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d Additional .ini files parsed: /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/10-mysqlnd.ini, /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/10-opcache.ini, # more lines below

A special env var called PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR can be used to override this path.

By setting PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR to empty you can disable everything:

$ docker container run -it --rm \ -e PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = \ jtreminio/php:7.2 php --ini Configuration File ( php.ini ) Path: /etc/php/7.2/cli Loaded Configuration File: /etc/php/7.2/cli/php.ini Scan for additional .ini files in: ( none ) Additional .ini files parsed: ( none )

, or change the scan directory completely, whether the directory has INI files or not:

$ docker container run -it --rm \ -e PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = /foo/bar \ jtreminio/php:7.2 php --ini Configuration File ( php.ini ) Path: /etc/php/7.2/cli Loaded Configuration File: /etc/php/7.2/cli/php.ini Scan for additional .ini files in: /foo/bar Additional .ini files parsed: ( none )

, and add additional scan directories to the default:

$ docker container run -it --rm \ -e PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = :/foo/bar \ jtreminio/php:7.2 php --ini Configuration File ( php.ini ) Path: /etc/php/7.2/cli Loaded Configuration File: /etc/php/7.2/cli/php.ini Scan for additional .ini files in: :/foo/bar Additional .ini files parsed: /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/10-mysqlnd.ini, /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/10-opcache.ini, # more lines below

Finally, PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR is powerful enough that you can even define multiple directories:

$ docker container run -it --rm \ -e PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = :/foo/bar:/baz/bam \ jtreminio/php:7.2 php --ini Configuration File ( php.ini ) Path: /etc/php/7.2/cli Loaded Configuration File: /etc/php/7.2/cli/php.ini Scan for additional .ini files in: :/foo/bar:/baz/bam Additional .ini files parsed: /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/10-mysqlnd.ini, /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/10-opcache.ini, # more lines below

One thing to keep in mind is that PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR only works with directories. There is not a PHP_INI_SCAN_FILE equivalent and you cannot use it to include specific files. It will load all INI files in a defined directory.

Using PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR you can introduce incredible flexibility to your environment by selectively loading INI files.

Loading Modules with PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR

Since PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR loads all INI files in a directory you have to create separate directories for all your optional modules.

If you install the Redis PHP module, an INI file is automatically created at /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/20-redis.ini . This is convenient if you want to actually enable this module, but not desired when you are creating a Docker image with flexibility in mind!

Simply creating another directory within /conf.d to hold the INI file will not work, since PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR scans all children. For example, moving it /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/redis/redis.ini will not change anything as it will still be loaded by default. You must move it outside of the scanned directory.

In my Docker image I chose /etc/php/extra-mods as the directory to hold all optional module’s INI files, so the Redis INI would go in /etc/php/extra-mods/redis/redis.ini .

This INI only contains a single line:

$ docker container run -it --rm \ jtreminio/php:7.2 cat /etc/php/extra-mods/redis/redis.ini extension = redis.so

If you do not tell PHP to load this file, Redis is not enabled, but you can now easily enable it with PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR :

$ docker container run -it --rm \ -e PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = :/etc/php/extra-mods/redis \ jtreminio/php:7.2 php --ini Configuration File ( php.ini ) Path: /etc/php/7.2/cli Loaded Configuration File: /etc/php/7.2/cli/php.ini Scan for additional .ini files in: :/etc/php/extra-mods/redis Additional .ini files parsed: /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/10-mysqlnd.ini, [ ...snip... ] /etc/php/extra-mods/redis/redis.ini

$ docker container run -it --rm \ -e PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = :/etc/php/extra-mods/redis \ jtreminio/php:7.2 php -i | grep redis 655 :Redis Support = > enabled 656 :Redis Version = > 4 .1.1 667 :Registered save handlers = > files user redis rediscluster

My Docker image comes with many modules installed, and with this you can now enable exactly the ones that you want:

$ docker container run -it --rm \ -e PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = :/etc/php/extra-mods/redis:/etc/php/extra-mods/gd:/etc/php/extra-mods/xdebug:/etc/php/extra-mods/mongodb \ jtreminio/php:7.2 php --ini Configuration File ( php.ini ) Path: /etc/php/7.2/cli Loaded Configuration File: /etc/php/7.2/cli/php.ini Scan for additional .ini files in: :/etc/php/extra-mods/redis:/etc/php/extra-mods/gd:/etc/php/extra-mods/xdebug:/etc/php/extra-mods/mongodb Additional .ini files parsed: /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d/10-mysqlnd.ini, [ ...snip... ] /etc/php/extra-mods/redis/redis.ini, /etc/php/extra-mods/gd/gd.ini, /etc/php/extra-mods/xdebug/xdebug.ini, /etc/php/extra-mods/mongodb/mongodb.ini

This is extremely powerful. Enabling modules and changing INI settings can be done solely through environment variables, without needing to rebuild your Docker image!

One small nitpick: this line is extremely long and unwieldy:

PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = :/etc/php/extra-mods/redis:/etc/php/extra-mods/gd:/etc/php/extra-mods/xdebug:/etc/php/extra-mods/mongodb

My images conveniently symlinks the much shorter /p to /etc/php/extra-mods , so the above now becomes:

PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = :/p/redis:/p/gd:/p/xdebug:/p/mongodb

Bonus: Separate FPM and CLI PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR Values

I hope you can already see the possibilities, but let me mention one that may not be immediately obvious.

You can define PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR for PHP-FPM, while also setting it to a different value for PHP-CLI.

$ docker container run -it --rm \ --name testing \ -e PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = :/p/redis \ jtreminio/php:7.2 *** Running /etc/my_init.d/00_regen_ssh_host_keys.sh... *** Running /etc/my_init.d/10_syslog-ng.init... Dec 15 05 :24:09 a9e40e3240c2 syslog-ng [ 13 ] : syslog-ng starting up ; version = '3.13.2' *** Booting runit daemon... *** Runit started as PID 22 Dec 15 05 :24:10 a9e40e3240c2 cron [ 27 ] : ( CRON ) INFO ( pidfile fd = 3 ) Dec 15 05 :24:10 a9e40e3240c2 cron [ 27 ] : ( CRON ) INFO ( Running @reboot jobs ) [ 15 -Dec-2018 05 :24:10 ] NOTICE: fpm is running, pid 32 [ 15 -Dec-2018 05 :24:10 ] NOTICE: ready to handle connections [ 15 -Dec-2018 05 :24:10 ] NOTICE: systemd monitor interval set to 10000ms

PHP-FPM is now running with Redis enabled. Running any PHP scripts within the container will also load Redis, even if not through PHP-FPM:

$ docker container exec \ testing php -i | grep redis 10 :Scan this dir for additional .ini files = > :/p/redis 49 :/p/redis/redis.ini 653 :redis 655 :Redis Support = > enabled 656 :Redis Version = > 4 .1.1 667 :Registered save handlers = > files user redis rediscluster 877 :PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = > :/p/redis 1485 : $_SERVER [ 'PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR' ] = > :/p/redis 2101 :This program is free software ; you can redistribute it and/or modify

However, you can also run PHP-CLI with Redis disabled, without having any effect on the running PHP-FPM instance:

$ docker container exec \ -e PHP_INI_SCAN_DIR = /etc/php/7.2/cli/conf.d \ testing php -i | grep redis 2094 :This program is free software ; you can redistribute it and/or modify

About the Image Size…

Like I mentioned, my Docker images are not optimized for size. The benefits far outweigh something as cheap as file size.

Surprisingly, when you compare my images with the official images you will notices that there is not much difference in size!

$ docker image ls REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE jtreminio/php 7 .2 9f0102616848 26 hours ago 381MB php 7 .2-fpm 2bd622691e6e 4 days ago 371MB

10MB larger size with the benefit of not needing to compile modules, nor having to maintain a separate php.ini file and instead being able to do all this through simple environment variables!

A worthy trade-off, in my opinion.

Want to Try It Out?

My images are all available on the Docker hub.

I maintain versions for PHP 7.3 - 5.6.

You can see all the Dockerfiles used to generate the images in my repo.

Wrapping It Up

I would like to thank Ondřej Surý for his years-long work in maintaining amazing PHP, Nginx, Apache (and more!) repos.

I would also like to thank Derick Rethans for letting me bounce ideas off of him. While my final solution may seem easy and obvious in hind-sight, actually arriving at this point required hours of Derick being supernaturally patient with me while I massacre his PHP language.

The resulting Docker images accomplish just about everything I had in mind. As I created, tinkered and optimized them through months of use at work, and asked the coworkers on my team to also use them.

I hope you may find them as useful and easy to use as we have, and your productivity to match!

Until next time, this is Señor PHP Developer Juan Treminio wishing you adios!