Closed mikehaertl closed 9 years ago
For reference, this discussion may also have some useful tips: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/docker-user/FCzUbjTIp_0
Here's a workaround that does the job for me. It would be great if we could include that in the php-fpm image:
FROM php:5.6.6-fpm
# Allow to include custom php-fpm config, e.g. to set environment variables
RUN echo 'include=/usr/local/etc/conf.d/*' >> /usr/local/etc/php-fpm.conf \
&& mkdir /usr/local/etc/conf.d/
COPY run-php-fpm /usr/local/bin/
CMD ["run-php-fpm"]
run-php-fpm:
#!/bin/bash
env | sed "s/\(.*\)=\(.*\)/env[\1]='\2'/" > /usr/local/etc/conf.d/env.conf
php-fpm
If you're going to re-expose the whole environment, clear_env = no
would be simpler.
Not sure what you mean. Where would you put that and what does it do?
I've added the whole environment as this is the same what the mod_php module does in Apache. It's what you'd probably expect from inside PHP.
Ahhh, now i see: http://php.net/manual/en/install.fpm.configuration.php. Why didn't I find this earlier? Spent quite some time to find a solution (and there are obviously others who also missed this).
So shouldn't this be set by default in this image? I think, env vars is the way to go with docker images.
From http://php.net/manual/en/install.fpm.configuration.php:
clear_env boolean Clear environment in FPM workers. Prevents arbitrary environment variables from reaching FPM worker processes by clearing the environment in workers before env vars specified in this pool configuration are added. Since PHP 5.4.27. Default value: Yes.
You'd put it in your php-fpm.conf
or a file included from it.
FWIW, I don't think the php:fpm
image should be changed to act as you've requested, but I do think the environment variable issue should be documented.
Or maybe it should be the default... I'm not sure actually.
FWIW, I don't think the php:fpm image should be changed to act as you've requested, but I do think the environment variable issue should be documented.
Hmm, why not? I don't think it's a security issue as mod_php does the same in Apache. Wouldn't you agree, that PHP apps should follow the 12factor principles and use env vars? If that's the case, we will always need this.
I'd just say that the fact that clear_env = Yes
is the default for php-fpm
should count for something, but I see your point.
BTW, if you're going to have a script like run-php-fpm
, make sure to do exec php-fpm
at the end instead of just php-fpm
:+1:
Ok, thanks. But undoing the above in my project now anyway :)
:+1: for clear_env = Yes
by default
@mathroc Can you explain why you're against clear_env = no
by default?
oops that was a mistake :/ I meant :+1: for clear_env = no
by default… as for the reason, it's because I need to add it manually in each of my php-fpm containers, I guess a lot of people have to do the same or worst are manually adding each need env var in php-fpm conf as you did at first. it's not that easy to find information about clear_env
when you search for "php-fpm env var" on google
I think in general it's a good idea to have clear_env = yes
for php, since env variables may contain sensible data which php should not be able to access.
You normally have a modified php-fpm.conf
anyway, so adding this one line is not to much of a hassle.
@sherter Then why is this different to the default configuration PHP apache module? The same would apply there. I can't see why it would make more sense in php-fpm. And as said before: Environment variables are a very common way to configure your docker container at runtime. So they should work by default, for both, Apache module and php-fpm.
This is the same default that is in debian when installing the php5-fpm
package, as well as the default in php (php.net). There is no corresponding setting for non-fpm php.
$ cat /etc/php5/fpm/pool.d/www.conf
...
; Clear environment in FPM workers
; Prevents arbitrary environment variables from reaching FPM worker processes
; by clearing the environment in workers before env vars specified in this
; pool configuration are added.
; Setting to "no" will make all environment variables available to PHP code
; via getenv(), $_ENV and $_SERVER.
; Default Value: yes
;clear_env = no
That said, since php is the only process in the container, I think it would be sane to change from upstream's default and add clear_env = no
, since then php will have access to things like linked sql address and port variables.
Cool, thanks!
Fixed in #93
ENV[*]
from fpm config can be reached as $_SERVER[*]
in PHP.
Hi!
just googled this issue and it looks like a good place for my 5 cents.it's not according this concrete docker image, but a caution to a docker image writers:
many docker images are built so that all passwords are configured during the first run
. This means you specify passwords that are available as environment variables in a running container during all docker container life cycle. For containers like the ones with PHP
or any other server-side scripting language inside which have access to environment variables this looks like a security issue: anyone who can eval some code on the server may read environment variables (if allowed, actually. But tuning this off may be forgotten, or be changed in a running container without recalling the side effects or by another person who tries to solve some other issue).
So personally I decided that it should be always separated. I build my own containers with all sensitive data being provided during the build step. Then I run it without providing any passwords. Yes, not very share-friendly and not that much convenient, but it works.
Please let me know if I'm missing something, or if you feel like I'm doing this completely wrong. Thanks!
Hi @olegstepura
giving your credentials to external services is a recommended practice (eg: http://12factor.net/config). I'm wondering, how are your storing your passwords in the container in a way that someone "who can eval some code on the server" cannot access your passwords ? I mean, if your code is able to access the passwords, any code running on the same server should also be able to access thoses passwords
many docker images are built so that all passwords are configured during the first run
@olegstepura That's not what this issue is about. Environment variables are usually passed at runtime to a container, not when you build them.
@mathroc Well, if it's a password for connecting to this container - it won't be saved in plaintext (password for connecting to Mysql - may be). For example I setup a hybrid container (I know it's not the Docker way, I would never do this, but let's assume) with PHP and openssh server. For SFTP access I need to setup a unix user. I need to provide this password either during build
or during run
. But SFTP user password should not be an ENV variable accessible by PHP. So we cannot pass it to run
.
docker build --build-arg SFTP_PASS=123
), it's stored on the server encrypted or I believe one-way hashed. So even if you would get read access to /etc/passwd
and read that hash - you still got no password (and thus cannot use it). Password will not be an environment variable in a running container.run
(docker run -e SFTP_PASS=123
) - it's an ENV variable accessible by PHP in some cases. May end up being a security issue.@mikehaertl Sorry, if this was completely wrong place to write this. Didn't find better one to connect to experts. This issue seem very close to the issue I try to discuss. And yes, concrete issue has nothing to do with my discussion.
clear_env = no
works
sed -i "s|;*clear_env\s*=\s*yes|clear_env = no|g" /etc/php5/php-fpm.conf
Thank you very mach
This is strange - I've uncommented clear_env = no
but I can't access ENV vars inside PHP.
For those of us on CentOS 7 who can't use clear_env = no
(php-fpm is just a tiny bit too old), mikehaertl's comment regarding the workaround with sed
is a lifesaver.
@deiucanta
This is strange - I've uncommented clear_env = no but I can't access ENV vars inside PHP.
In the case you were starting php-fpm
not in a container but with systemd
you need to said it where to get environment variables. For example set in /lib/systemd/system/php7.2-fpm.service
:
EnvironmentFile=/etc/environment
@kamihouse when you run /etc/init.d/php7.2-fpm
, you are not running the FPM binary provided by this image (same with service
or systemd
or any other init system which we don't set up scripts for because the fpm
variants of this image are designed to run FPM by itself)
This is strange - I've uncommented
clear_env = no
but I can't access ENV vars inside PHP.
yes me too
For those who still don't have access to $_ENV
, this php.ini
setting is (now) important (in e.g. php:8.0-fpm-alpine
).
from php.ini-production
:
; This directive determines which super global arrays are registered when PHP
; starts up. G,P,C,E & S are abbreviations for the following respective super
; globals: GET, POST, COOKIE, ENV and SERVER. There is a performance penalty
; paid for the registration of these arrays and because ENV is not as commonly
; used as the others, ENV is not recommended on productions servers. You
; can still get access to the environment variables through getenv() should you
; need to.
; Default Value: "EGPCS"
; Development Value: "GPCS"
; Production Value: "GPCS";
; http://php.net/variables-order
variables_order = "GPCS"
In my case the problem was incorrect php-fpm port in nginx configuration: I set fastcgi_pass to 9001 (pm.status_listen
) instead of 9000 (listen
). It took me almost the full working day to understand the reason of the problem because the configuration works normally except the one thing: phpfpm does no pass external env vars.
I was facing same issue in php8.2 with wordpress running on kubernetes. Kuberentes secrets were not read by php-fpm and was giving database connection error. I added below line in Dokcerfile
RUN echo "clear_env = no" >> /etc/php-fpm.d/www.conf
And then I started php-fpm -D post container start
That means you're either not using the image/PHP install maintained in this repository (and discussed in this issue) or have explicitly configured your deployment to use /etc/php-fpm.d
instead of our image's /usr/local/etc/php-fpm.d
, and thus are having to replicate the configuration we pre-bake into our images:
This is very old, but if you end up on this page and your version of php-fpm don't support "clear_env" like mine on version php5-fpm was giving below error:
ERROR: [/etc/php5/fpm/pool.d/www.conf:369] unknown entry 'clear_env' ERROR: Unable to include /etc/php5/fpm/pool.d/www.conf from /etc/php5/fpm/php-fpm.conf at line 369 ERROR: failed to load configuration file '/etc/php5/fpm/php-fpm.conf' ERROR: FPM initialization failed
There is work around that might work for you, you can pass the system to variable directly to php-fpm but you will have to specific all the variable that you want to pass like below:
cat /etc/php5/fpm/pool.d/env.conf
env[HOSTNAME] = $HOSTNAME env[PWD] = $PWD env[DB_NAME] = $DB_NAME env[DB_PASSWORD] = $DB_PASSWORD
you can add it your www.conf file or create a new file like i did.
That means you're either not using the image/PHP install maintained in this repository (and discussed in this issue) or have explicitly configured your deployment to use
/etc/php-fpm.d
instead of our image's/usr/local/etc/php-fpm.d
, and thus are having to replicate the configuration we pre-bake into our images:
If you use the php-fpm variant, environment variables (e.g. for linked docker hosts) are not available in your
$_ENV
var in your PHP scripts. This is a problem as usually docker containers are configured via environment variables (following the 12 factor principles). While this is rather a PHP problem, I still think that the official php-fpm image should provide a workaround for this, as otherwhise it's pretty much useless.For php-fpm all environment variables have to be listed in the
php-fpm.conf
like:So I suggest to create a wrapper script to first add all variables from
env
to the configuration, before actually starting php.