Phusion Passenger is an Apache and Nginx module for deploying Ruby on Rails web applications, and is mainly focused on ease of use and stability.

Introducing the announcements mailing list

We now have an announcement-only mailing list for new Phusion Passenger releases. This mailing list can also be used for packagers to announce packaging updates. Future versions will no longer be announced on the discussion board, so discussion board subscribers who wish to be notified about new versions should subscribe to this announcements mailing list as well.

If you’re a packager and you’d like to have posting access to the announcements list, then please post a message on the discussion board.

Recent changes

Phusion Passenger is under constant maintenance and development. We are pleased to announce Phusion Passenger version 2.2.5. This is a bug fix release.

The following things have changed since 2.2.4:

[Apache] Small file uploads are now buffered; fixes potential DoS attack Phusion Passenger buffers large file uploads to temp files so that it doesn’t block applications while an upload is in progress, but it sent small uploads directly to the application without buffering it. This could result in a potential DoS attack: the client can send many small, incomplete file uploads to the server, and this would block all application processes until a timeout occurs. In order to solve this problem, Phusion Passenger now buffers small file uploads in memory. Bug #356. [Apache] Fixed support for mod_rewrite passthrough rules Mod_rewrite passthrough rules were not properly supported because of a bug fix for supporting encoded slashes (%2f) in URLs. Unfortunately, due to bugs/limitations in Apache, we can support either encoded slashes or mod_rewrite passthrough rules, but not both; supporting one will break the other. Support for mod_rewrite passthrough rules is now enabled by default; that is, support for encoded slashes is disabled by default. A new configuration option, PassengerAllowEncodedSlashes, has been added. Turning this option on will enable support for encoded slashes and disable support for mod_rewrite passthrough rules. Issue #113 and issue #230. [Apache] Added a configuration option for resolving symlinks in the document root path Phusion Passenger 2.2.0 and higher no longer resolves symlinks in the document root path in order to properly support Capistrano-style directory structures. The exact behavior is documented in the Users Guide, section "How Phusion Passenger detects whether a virtual host is a web application". However, some people relied on the old behavior. A new configuration option, PassengerResolveSymlinksInDocumentRoot, has been added to allow reverting back to the old behavior. Patch contributed by Locaweb. [Apache] mod_env variables are now also passed through CGI environment headers Prior to version 2.2.3, environment variables set by mod_env are passed to the application as CGI environment headers, not through Ruby’s ENV variable. In the last release we introduced support for setting ENV environment variables with mod_env, and got rid of the code for setting CGI environment headers. It turns out that some people relied on the old behavior, we so now environment variables set with mod_env are set in both ENV and in the CGI environment. Fixes bug #335. [Apache] Fixed compilation problems on some Linux systems with older versions of Apache If you used to see compilation errors like this: ext/apache2/Configuration.cpp:554: error: expected primary-expression before '.' token then this version should compile properly. [Apache] Fixed I/O timeouts for communication with backend processes Got rid of the code for enforcing I/O timeouts when reading from or writing to a backend process. This caused more problems than it solved. [Nginx] Support for streaming responses (e.g. Comet or HTTP push) Buffering of backend responses is now disabled. This fixes support for streaming responses, something which the Apache version has supported for a while now. One can generate streaming responses in Ruby on Rails like this: render :text => lambda { |response, output| 10_000.times do |i| output.write("hello #{i}!

") end } [Nginx] Installer now installs Nginx 0.7.61 by default Previously it installed 0.6.37 by default. [Nginx] Fixed the installer’s –extra-configure-flags flag when combined with –auto-download Arguments passed to –extra-configure-flags were not being passed to the Nginx configure script when –auto-download is given. This has been fixed: bug #349. [Nginx] Fixed unnecessary download of PCRE The installer now checks whether PCRE is installed in /opt/local (e.g. MacPorts) as well before concluding that it isn’t installed and going ahead with downloading PCRE. Fixed STDERR capturing While spawning an application, Phusion Passenger captures any output written to STDERR so that it can show them later if the application failed to start. This turns out to be much more difficult than expected, with all kinds of corner cases that can mess up this feature. For example, if the Rails log file is not writable, then this can cause Rails to crash with a bizarre and unhelpful error message whenever it tries to write to STDERR: /!\ FAILSAFE /!\ Thu Aug 20 14:58:39 +1000 2009 Status: 500 Internal Server Error undefined method `[]' for nil:NilClass Some applications reopen STDERR to a log file. This didn’t work. Of all of these problems have been fixed now. (Bug #332) Fixed some bugs in application sources preloading Rails >= 2.2 already preloads the application sources, in which case Phusion Passenger wasn’t supposed to perform it’s own preloading, but the Rails >= 2.2 detection code was bugged. This has been fixed. Rails < 2.2 doesn’t preload the application sources by itself, but there should be a certain order with which the sources are preloaded, otherwise preloading could fail in some applications. We now enforce a specific load order: first models, then controllers, then helpers. Bug #359. Fixed a few bugs in WSGI compliance PATH_INFO is supposed to be set to the request URI, but without the query string and without the base URI. This has been fixed: bug #360. Other things Fixed some Ruby 1.9-specific crashes caused by encoding issues. Bug #354. Fixed loading of config/environment.rb on Ruby 1.9.2, because Ruby 1.9.2 no longer has "." in the default load path. Patch by metaljastix, issue #368. The Users Guide for Apache now mentions something about correct permissions for application directories. Fixed compilation problems on IA-64 (bug #118). We also reduced the stack sizes for the threads by half, so Phusion Passenger should use even less virtual memory now. Fixed compilation problems on Linux systems with ARM CPU. Fixed a few compatibility problems with 64-bit OpenBSD. Fixed a few typos and minor bugs.

Wait, what about Snow Leopard?

There are some known issues with Snow Leopard, though we do not yet know what these issues exactly are, what causes them or how to fix them. We haven’t upgraded yet because Snow Leopard is sold out in all local stores. Please check the discussion board for updates about Snow Leopard support.

How do I upgrade to 2.2.5?

Via a gem

Please install it with the following command:

gem install passenger

Next, run:

passenger-install-apache2-module

Or, if you’re an Nginx user:

passenger-install-nginx-module

Please don’t forget to copy & paste the Apache/Nginx config snippet that the installer gives you.

Via a native Linux package

John Leach from Brightbox has kindly provided an Ubuntu 8.04 package for Phusion Passenger. The package is available from the Brightbox repository which you can find at:

http://apt.brightbox.net

Add the following line to the Third Party Software Sources:

deb http://apt.brightbox.net hardy main

(The simplest way to do that is to create a file in /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ containing the deb instruction, and then run ‘apt-get update’).

Once you’ve done this then you can install Phusion Passenger by running:

sudo apt-get install libapache2-mod-passenger

-or-

sudo apt-get install nginx-brightbox

(Note that John is currently packaging 2.2.5, so it might take a while before this release shows up in the apt repository.)

Final

Phusion Passenger is provided to the community for free. If you like Phusion Passenger, please consider sending us a donation. Thank you!