Creating Run/Debug configurations in PhpStorm Sometimes it is useful to create and store some specific configuration so you can run it over and over. I will not describe the whole Run/Debug configurations topic here but only one Docker-specific aspect: you need to teach your PhpStorm to run PHP interpreter inside your container. Add Xdebug to the Webserver Dockerfile Since this image is using alpine, it's a little different than a lot of the approaches you might find if you just google 'Install Xdebug PHP.' At the end of your app Dockerfile you need to manually install xdebug using pecl, so add this command at the bottom. Before Docker, Xdebug was relatively straightforward to configure on a platform, in that it was a new set of the php.ini parameters – you’d either just edit the existing php.ini, or load in a custom ini or override. Now we’re running PHP and fpm in a container, so we need to inject the configuration in with docker-compose. This is to test if you can connect from Docker image to the xdebug listener in IDE - to confirm that it's not a firewall issue - be it your ESET or Docker one. Obviously, it means that 'phone handle' icon in PhpStorm must be activated or IDE is already listening for incoming xdebug connections.
Download the Xdebug extension compatible with your PHP version and install it as described in the installation guide.
Xdebug 3 brings performance improvements, simplified configuration, and PHP 8 support. To learn more on upgrading to Xdebug 3, see the Upgrade guide.
If you are using an AMP package, the Xdebug extension may be already installed. Refer to the instructions specific for your package.
Open the active php.ini file in the editor:
In the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, click PHP.
On the PHP page that opens, click next to the CLI Interpreter field.
In the CLI Interpreters dialog that opens, the Configuration file read-only field shows the path to the active php.ini file. Click Open in Editor.
To disable the Zend Debugger and Zend Optimizer tools, which block Xdebug, remove or comment out the following lines in the php.ini file:
To enable Xdebug, locate or create the [xdebug]
section in the php.ini file and update it as follows:
In PHP 5.3 and later, you need to use only zend_extension
, not zend_extension_ts
, zend_extension_debug
, or extension
.
To enable multi-user debugging via Xdebug proxies, locate the xdebug.idekey
setting and assign it a value of your choice. This value will be used to register your IDE on Xdebug proxy servers.
Save and close the php.ini file.
Verify Xdebug installation by doing any of the following:
In the command line, run the following command:
The output should list Xdebug among the installed extensions:
Create a php file containing the following code:
Open the file in the browser. The phpinfo
output should contain the Xdebug section:
In the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, select PHP.
Check the Xdebug installation associated with the selected PHP interpreter:
On the PHP page, choose the relevant PHP installation from the CLI Interpreter list and click next to the field. The list shows all the PHP installations available in PhpStorm, see Configure local PHP interpreters and Configure remote PHP interpreters.
The version of the selected PHP installation.
The name and version of the debugging engine associated with the selected PHP installation (Xdebug or Zend Debugger). If no debugger is configured, PhpStorm shows the corresponding message:
Alternatively, open the Installation Wizard, paste the output of the phpinfo()
, and click Analyze my phpinfo() output. Learn more about checking the Xdebug installation in Validate the Configuration of a Debugging Engine.
Define the Xdebug behaviour. Click Debug under the PHP node. On the Debug page that opens, specify the following settings in the Xdebug area:
In the Debug port field, appoint the port through which the tool will communicate with PhpStorm.
This must be the same port number as specified in the php.ini file:
By default, Xdebug 2 listens on port 9000. For Xdebug 3, the default port has changed from 9000 to 9003. You can specify several ports by separating them with a comma. By default, the Debug port value is set to 9001,9003 to have PhpStorm listen on both ports simultaneously.
To have PhpStorm accept any incoming connections from Xdebug engine through the port specified in the Debug port field, select the Can accept external connections checkbox.
When this checkbox cleared, the debugger does not stop upon reaching and opening an unmapped file, the file is just processed, and no error messages are displayed.
Select the Force break at first line when a script is outside the project checkbox to have the debugger stop at the first line as soon as it reaches and opens a file outside the current project. With this checkbox cleared, the debugger continues upon opening a file outside the current project.
In the External connections area, specify how you want PhpStorm to treat connections received from hosts and through ports that are not registered as deployment server configurations.
Ignore external connections through unregistered server configurations: Select this checkbox to have PhpStorm ignore connections received from hosts and through ports that are not registered as deployment server configurations. When this checkbox is selected, PhpStorm does not attempt to create a deployment server configuration automatically.
Break at first line in PHP scripts: Select this checkbox to have the debugger stop as soon as connection between it and PhpStorm is established (instead of running automatically until the first breakpoint is reached). Alternatively turn on the Run | Break at first line in PHP scripts option from the main menu.
Max. simultaneous connections Use this spin box to limit the number of external connections that can be processed simultaneously.
By default, PhpStorm only listens for incoming IPv4 connections. To enable IPv6 support, you need to make adjustments in PhpStorm JVM options:
Select Help | Edit Custom VM Options from the main menu.
In the .vmoptions file that opens, delete the -Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true
line.
Restart PhpStorm.
PhpStorm supports the On-Demand mode, where you can disable Xdebug for your global PHP installation and have it enabled automatically on demand only when you are debugging your command-line scripts or when you need code coverage reports. This lets your command line scripts (including Composer and unit tests) run much faster.
Disable Xdebug for command-line scripts:
In the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, go to PHP.
From the PHP executable list, choose the relevant PHP interpreter and click next to it. In the CLI Interpreters dialog that opens, click the Open in Editor link next to the Configuration file: <path to php.ini> file. Close all the dialogs and switch to the tab where the php.ini file is opened.
In the php.ini file, find the [xdebug]
section and comment the following line in it by adding ;
in preposition:
Open the CLI Interpreters dialog and click next to the PHP executable field. PhpStorm informs you that debugger is not installed:
To enable PhpStorm to activate Xdebug when it is necessary, specify the path to it in the Debugger extension field, in the Additional area. Type the path manually or click and select the location in the dialog that opens.
PhpStorm supports the use of Xdebug in the Just-In-Time (JIT) mode so it is not attached to your code all the time but connects to PhpStorm only when an error occurs or an exception is thrown. Depending on the Xdebug version used, this operation mode is toggled through the following settings:
Xdebug 2 uses the xdebug .remote_mode setting, which has to be set to jit
.
Xdebug 3 uses the xdebug.start_upon_error setting, which has to be set to yes
.
The mode is available both for debugging command-line scripts and for web server debugging.
Depending on whether you are going to debug command-line scripts or use a Web server, use one of the scenarios below.
For debugging command-line scripts, specify the custom -dxdebug.remote_mode=jit
(for Xdebug 2) or -dxdebug.start_upon_error=yes
(for Xdebug 3) directive as an additional configuration option:
In the Settings/Preferences dialog Ctrl+Alt+S, navigate to PHP.
From the PHP executable list, choose the relevant PHP interpreter and click next to it.
In the CLI Interpreters dialog that opens, click next to the Configuration options field in the Additional area.
In the Configuration Options dialog that opens, click to add a new entry.
For Xdebug 2, type xdebug.remote_mode
in the Configuration directive field and jit
in the Value field.
For Xdebug 3, type xdebug.start_upon_error
in the Configuration directive field and yes
in the Value field.
When you click OK, you return to the CLI Interpreters dialog where the Configuration options field shows -dxdebug.remote_mode=jit
(for Xdebug 2) or -dxdebug.start_upon_error=yes
(for Xdebug 3).
From the main menu, choose Run | Web Server Debug Validation.
In the Validate Remote Environment that opens, choose the Web server to validate the debugger on.
Choose Local Web Server or Shared Folder to check a debugger associated with a local Web server.
Path to Create Validation Script: In this field, specify the absolute path to the folder under the server document root where the validation script will be created. For Web servers of the type Inplace, the folder is under the project root.
The folder must be accessible through http.
URL to Validation Script: In this field, type the URL address of the folder where the validation script will be created. If the project root is mapped to a folder accessible through http, you can specify the project root or any other folder under it.
Choose Remote Web Server to check a debugger associated with a remote server.
Path to Create Validation Script: In this field, specify the absolute path to the folder under the server document root where the validation script will be created. The folder must be accessible through http.
Deployment Server: In this field, specify the server access configuration of the type Local Server or Remote Server to access the target environment. For details, see Configure synchronization with a Web server.
Choose a configuration from the list or click Browse in the Deployment dialog.
Click Validate to have PhpStorm create a validation script, deploy it to the target remote environment, and run it there.
Open the php.ini file which is reported as loaded and associated with Xdebug.
In the php.ini file, find the [xdebug]
section.
Change the value of the xdebug.remote_mode
from the default req
to jit
.
Change the value of the xdebug.start_upon_error
from the default default
to yes
.
See also Just-In-Time debugging and PHP Exception Breakpoints with PhpStorm and Xdebug
To configure Xdebug running in a Docker container, provide the Xdebug-specific parameters in the Dockerfile, for example:
In this example, we're modifying /usr/local/etc/php/conf.d/docker-php-ext-xdebug.ini providing the remote_enable
and remote_host
Xdebug parameters.
Note that the xdebug.remote_host
value should be replaced with the IP address of the machine where PhpStorm is running, which is accessible from the Docker container. If you are using Docker for Windows or Docker for Mac, you can set xdebug.remote_host
to host.docker.internal
, which automatically resolves to the internal address of the host, letting you easily connect to it from the container.
In this example, we're modifying /usr/local/etc/php/conf.d/docker-php-ext-xdebug.ini providing the mode
and client_host
Xdebug parameters.
Note that the xdebug.client_host
value should be replaced with the IP address of the machine where PhpStorm is running, which is accessible from the Docker container. If you are using Docker for Windows or Docker for Mac, you can set xdebug.client_host
to host.docker.internal
, which automatically resolves to the internal address of the host, letting you easily connect to it from the container.
To configure Xdebug running on a Vagrant instance, connect to the Vagrant machine and provide the Xdebug-specific parameters in the php.ini file:
Note that the xdebug.remote_host
value is 10.0.2.2
. This is the gateway used in the default Vagrant setup, which allows connecting from the instance to host where PhpStorm is running.
Note that the xdebug.client_host
value is 10.0.2.2
. This is the gateway used in the default Vagrant setup, which allows connecting from the instance to host where PhpStorm is running.
I've been using Docker for my local environments at Vanilla since 2017.It was a good way to ensure consistent & reproducible developer environmentsand was a marked improvement over what we were running before. We setup a single repositorywith our shared environment (vanilla-docker) andit spread across the company like wildfire.
The consistency was great, especially as we onboarded various junior developers over the years.Unfortunately in 2018, Apple released MacOS High Sierra, sporting a new filesystem, APFS.
This brought one single major regression to our developer environments.
In the beginning, it was completely unusable.Massive CPU spikes would freeze up our machines, and response times were abysmal.
Things got a little better with introduction of a few options when mounting volumes: Delegated & Cached
These along with various improvements in docker for mac made things better,but we still struggled with performance for a long time.It wasn't completely unusable, but we were seeing 3-4 second response times in docker,where we would see 200-300ms response times in local development.
I tried a few things to speed them up.
node_modules
directories in particular needed to be excluded in order for things to sync for even short periods of time).Many of our developers use XDebug extensively during development and testing.A 2-5x slowdown while running a debug session is not unexpected.
Little did I know that just having the extension installed brings along some significant slowdown.This is amplified in docker, where every System IO call brings with it a lot of overhead due to the virtualization in Docker for Mac.
Removing the XDebug extension had the local sites responding within expected times again.XDebug is really useful though. I didn't want to give it up. Enabling it also couldn't be an onerous activity; I could use XDebug 10-20 times throughout a workday, and having to restart the container would be a chore.
The final solution ended up being running 2 PHP-FPM containers.
Nginx was already used to serve our PHP-FPM processes, so I just updated the configuration to route between them.
Nginx Server Config
This is the bulk of the required configuration. It does the following:
?XDEBUG_SESSION_START
Debug PHP config
'Production-ish' PHP config