How to Use PHP's built-in Web Server
Warning: You are browsing the documentation for Symfony 4.x, which is no longer maintained.
Read the updated version of this page for Symfony 7.2 (the current stable version).
4.4
This article explains how to use the WebServerBundle to run Symfony applications on your local computer. However, that bundle is deprecated since Symfony 4.4 and will be removed in Symfony 5.0.
Instead of using WebServerBundle, the preferred way to run your Symfony applications locally is to use the Symfony Local Web Server.
The PHP CLI SAPI comes with a built-in web server. It can be used to run your PHP applications locally during development, for testing or for application demonstrations. This way, you don't have to bother configuring a full-featured web server such as Apache or nginx.
Caution
The built-in web server is meant to be run in a controlled environment. It is not designed to be used on public networks.
Symfony provides a web server built on top of this PHP server to simplify your local setup. This server is distributed as a bundle, so you must first install and enable the server bundle.
Installing the Web Server Bundle
Move into your project directory and run this command:
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$ cd your-project/
$ composer require --dev symfony/web-server-bundle
Starting the Web Server
To run a Symfony application using PHP's built-in web server, run the
server:start
command:
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$ php bin/console server:start
This starts the web server at localhost:8000
in the background that serves
your Symfony application.
By default, the web server listens on port 8000 on the loopback device. You can change the socket passing an IP address and a port as a command-line argument:
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# passing a specific IP and port
$ php bin/console server:start 192.168.0.1:8080
# passing '*' as the IP means to use 0.0.0.0 (i.e. any local IP address)
$ php bin/console server:start *:8080
Note
You can use the server:status
command to check if a web server is
listening:
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$ php bin/console server:status
Tip
Some systems do not support the server:start
command, in these cases
you can execute the server:run
command. This command behaves slightly
different. Instead of starting the server in the background, it will block
the current terminal until you terminate it (this is usually done by
pressing Ctrl and C).
Command Options
The built-in web server expects a "router" script (read about the "router"
script on php.net) as an argument. Symfony already passes such a router
script when the command is executed in the prod
or dev
environment.
Use the --router
option to use your own router script:
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$ php bin/console server:start --router=config/my_router.php
If your application's document root differs from the standard directory layout,
you have to pass the correct location using the --docroot
option:
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$ php bin/console server:start --docroot=public_html
Stopping the Server
When you finish your work, you can stop the web server with the following command:
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$ php bin/console server:stop