The default installation of LiteSpeed Web Server provides external applications for PHP4 and PHP5. With cPanel and other hosting control panels, though, administrators can provide even more versions of PHP (e.g. PHP 5.2.x or PHP 5.3.x for PHP5). Providing these multiple versions in LiteSpeed requires further customization of your setup. This document details the steps needed to create custom PHP script handlers in the control panel environment (cPanel, DirectAdmin, Plesk, etc) to provide for multiple PHP versions. Enabling multiple PHP versions provides flexibility to suit different end user needs and improves service quality.
When using LSWS with a control panel, users' web server configurations (httpd.conf files) are managed via the control panel. LSWS can manage server-level settings, but has no control over the the individual user level (the virtual host level). LSWS instead reads these user-specific configurations via the Using Apache Configuration File settings at the server level. Thus, to make multiple PHP versions available to users, some settings can be set through the WebAdmin console while other settings are changed directly through directives in the appropriate files. The following steps are required:
1. Compile multiple PHP versions (with needed extensions) for LSWS. You can also make separate PHP binaries each with different extensions but the SAME PHP version.
PHP 5.3.24 (with GD + Mailparse) : /usr/local/lsws/lsphp5324gm/bin/lsphp PHP 5.3.24 (with SOAP) : /usr/local/lsws/lsphp5324soap/bin/lsphp PHP 5.4.14 (with SOAP) : /usr/local/lsws/lsphp5414soap/bin/lsphp
Notes:
./configure '--prefix=/usr/local/lsws/lsphp5324gm' '--with-litespeed' ... make make install
./configure '--prefix=/usr/local/lsws/lsphp5324soap' '--with-litespeed' ... make make install
./configure '--prefix=/usr/local/lsws/lsphp5414soap' '--with-litespeed' ... make make install
2. Set up each PHP version binary as an LSAPI type external application (with a unique name) in LSWS at the server level. (LSWS WebAdmin Console → Configuration → Server → External App → Add) Sample settings below:
lsphp53_1 --> PHP 5.3.24 (with GD + Mailparse) Name: lsphp53_1 Address: uds://tmp/lshttpd/lsphp5324gm.sock Command: /usr/local/lsws/lsphp5324gm/bin/lsphp Start By Server: Yes Memory Soft Limit(bytes): 200M Memory Hard Limit(bytes): 300M Process Soft Limit: 200 Process Hard Limit: 200
lsphp53_2 --> PHP 5.3.24 (with SOAP) Name: lsphp53_2 Address: uds://tmp/lshttpd/lsphp5324soap.sock Command: /usr/local/lsws/lsphp5324soap/bin/lsphp Start By Server: Yes Memory Soft Limit(bytes): 200M Memory Hard Limit(bytes): 300M Process Soft Limit: 200 Process Hard Limit: 200
lsphp54 --> PHP 5.4.14 (with SOAP) Name: lsphp54 Address: uds://tmp/lshttpd/lsphp5414soap.sock Command: /usr/local/lsws/lsphp5414soap/bin/lsphp Start By Server: Yes Memory Soft Limit(bytes): 200M Memory Hard Limit(bytes): 300M Process Soft Limit: 200 Process Hard Limit: 200
Note: The socket addresses can be anything, but they must be unique. Memory limits and process limits given are for reference. Modify as needed.
3. Each external application must have script handlers set up at the server level to tell the web server which scripts to send to which application. Script handlers are set up in the LSWS WebAdmin console. (LSWS WebAdmin Console → Configuration → Server → Script Handler → Add) Sample script handler settings are below:
suffix --> ext app =================== php5 --> lsphp53_1 php53 --> lsphp53_2 php54 --> lsphp54
Creating script handlers automatically creates MIME types for the suffixes you stipulate. (This only happens for the first suffix stipulated in each script handler's settings. Additional suffixes require that you set up a corresponding MIME type manually in LSWS WebAdmin Console → Configuration → General → MIME Settings.) The MIME types automatically set up for the suffixes stipulated above would be:
application/x-httpd-php5 application/x-httpd-php53 application/x-httpd-php54
4. You and your users can now go into your files and change file suffixes so that each script goes to the proper application (and thus the proper version of PHP). You can also use directives (in httpd.conf and .htaccess files) to manipulate how the server translates suffixes into MIME types. It is these MIME types, not the actual suffixes on the file, that the server looks at when assigning scripts to script handlers. Thus the AddType, ForceType, and AddHandler directives can change which script handler a file goes to, even if the actual suffix is not changed. For example, the following in a .htaccess file would cause all .php files in that directory to be processed by PHP 5.4.14 (because it would be sent to the lsphp54 external application):
AddType application/x-httpd-php54 php
The directive below would also have the same effect:
AddHandler application/x-httpd-php54 php
Another way to solve the problem is to use the ForceType directive. ForceType in a .htaccess file changes all files in the directory to a single MIME-type. The following command would cause all files in this directory to be sent to the lsphp53_1 external application:
ForceType application/x-httpd-php5
If you want to use multiple PHP versions for files in the same directory, you will have to change some suffixes. In the following example we're using all three versions of PHP for files with different suffixes in the same directory:
AddType application/x-httpd-php5 php53 AddType application/x-httpd-php53 php AddType application/x-httpd-php54 php54
(The last directive is actually unnecessary, as that suffix-to-MIME type mapping was set when we set up a script handler for the suffix php54.)
Notes: