324 lines
8.8 KiB
Markdown
324 lines
8.8 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: Running Drupal 8.8 with the Symfony Local Server
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excerpt: How to use Symfony's local web server to run a Drupal 8.8 website.
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date: 2020-03-09
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tags:
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- drupal
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- drupal-8
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- symfony
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---
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![A screenshot of a terminal window running a Drupal project with the Symfony local server](/images/blog/running-drupal-with-symfony-local-server/terminal.png)
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<!--
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## Why use the Symfony server?
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- performance
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- reusable knowledge
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-->
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## Installation
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<https://symfony.com/doc/current/setup/symfony_server.html>
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The Symfony server is bundled as part of the `symfony` binary that is available
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to download from <https://symfony.com/download>.
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To install it, run this command:
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```bash
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curl -sS https://get.symfony.com/cli/installer | bash
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```
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Even though it’s by Symfony, the local webserver works with any type of
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project - including Drupal 8 (and 9) and Drupal 7.
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## Getting started
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Here are the basic commands to start and stop the server:
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```bash
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# Alias for server:start, starts the server
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symfony serve
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# Run the server in daemon mode (in the background)
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symfony serve -d
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# Display the status of the server
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symfony server:status
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# Stop the server
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symfony server:stop
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```
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If your Drupal files are within a `web` or `docroot` directory, it will
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automatically be used as the document root for the server, so files are served
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from there if you run the serve command.
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If you use a different subdirectory name - one that isn't loaded automatically -
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you can use the `--document-root` option:
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```bash
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symfony serve --document-root www
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```
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## Different PHP Versions
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One of the most useful features of the Symfony server is that it
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[supports multiple versions of PHP](https://symfony.com/doc/current/setup/symfony_server.html#different-php-settings-per-project)
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if you have them installed, and a different version can be selected per
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directory.
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This is done by adding a `.php-version` file to the root of the project that
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contains the PHP version to use. For example:
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```bash
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echo "7.3" > .php-version
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```
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Next time the server is started, this file will be read and the correct version
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of PHP will be used.
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If you’re using macOS and want to install another version of PHP, you can do it
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using Homebrew:
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```bash
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# Install PHP 7.3
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brew install php@7.3
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```
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[Further PHP customisations can be made per project](https://symfony.com/doc/current/setup/symfony_server.html#overriding-php-config-options-per-project)
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by adding a `php.ini` file.
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## Securing Sites Locally
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The Symfony server allows for serving sites via HTTPS locally by installing its
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own local certificate authority.
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If it’s not installed automatically, run this command to install it:
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```
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symfony server:ca:install
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```
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Now any site will be served via HTTPS by default, and any HTTP requests will be
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automatically redirected.
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If you need to run a site with just HTTP, add the `--no-tls` option to the
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`serve` command.
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## Adding Databases (and other services) with Docker
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The Symfony server has an integration with Docker for providing extra services -
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such as databases that we’ll need to install Drupal.
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This is my `docker-compose.yaml` file which defines a `database` service for
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MySQL:
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```yaml
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version: '2.1'
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services:
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database:
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image: mysql:5.7
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ports: [3306]
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environment:
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MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: secret
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volumes:
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- mysql-data:/var/lib/mysql
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volumes:
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mysql-data:
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```
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Because port 3306 is exposed, the server recognises it as a database service and
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automatically creates environment variables prefixed with `DATABASE_`.
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A list of all the environment variables can be seen by running
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`symfony var:export` (add `| tr " " "\n"` if you want to view each one on a new
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line, and `| sort` if you want to list them alphabetically):
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```dotenv
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DATABASE_DATABASE=main
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DATABASE_DRIVER=mysql
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DATABASE_HOST=127.0.0.1
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DATABASE_NAME=main
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DATABASE_PASSWORD=secret
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DATABASE_PORT=32776
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DATABASE_SERVER=mysql://127.0.0.1:32776
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DATABASE_URL=mysql://root:secret@127.0.0.1:32776/main?sslmode=disable&charset=utf8mb4
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DATABASE_USER=root
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DATABASE_USERNAME=root
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SYMFONY_DOCKER_ENV=1
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SYMFONY_TUNNEL=
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SYMFONY_TUNNEL_ENV=
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```
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Now these environment variables can be used within `settings.php` file to allow
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configure Drupal’s database connection settings:
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```php
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// web/sites/default/settings.php
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if ($_SERVER['SYMFONY_DEFAULT_ROUTE_URL']) {
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$databases['default']['default'] = [
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'driver' => $_SERVER['DATABASE_DRIVER'],
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'host' => $_SERVER['DATABASE_HOST'],
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'database' => $_SERVER['DATABASE_NAME'],
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'username' => $_SERVER['DATABASE_USER'],
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'password' => $_SERVER['DATABASE_PASSWORD'],
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'port' => $_SERVER['DATABASE_PORT'],
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'prefix' => '',
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'namespace' => 'Drupal\\Core\\Database\\Driver\\mysql',
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'collation' => 'utf8mb4_general_ci',
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];
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}
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```
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To keep things organised, I usually like to split these settings into their own
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file and include it:
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```php
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if ($_SERVER['SYMFONY_DEFAULT_ROUTE_URL'] && file_exists(__DIR__ . '/settings.symfony.php')) {
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require_once __DIR__ . '/settings.symfony.php';
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}
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```
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## Installing Drupal
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Now that Drupal can connect to the (empty) database, we can install the site. I
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usually do this using Drush, which is added as a dependency via Composer.
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The command that I’d usually run is:
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```bash
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cd web
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../vendor/bin/drush site-install
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```
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However, this will cause an error like this because Drupal cannot connect to the
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database when Drush is run in this way.
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> Error: Class 'Drush\Sql\Sql' not found in Drush\Sql\SqlBase::getInstance()
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To fix this, ensure that the command is prefixed with `symfony php`. This will
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ensure that the correct PHP version and configuration is used, and that the
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appropriate environment variables are available.
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```bash
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symfony php ../vendor/bin/drush site-install
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```
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This also applies to all other Drush commands.
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## Custom Domain Names
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Currently we can only access the site via the localhost URL with a specific
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port. The port is determined automatically when the server is started so it can
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change if you have multiple projects running.
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Symfony server also allows for
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[adding local domain names through a proxy](https://symfony.com/doc/current/setup/symfony_server.html#local-domain-names).
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This is useful if you always want to access the site from the same URL, or if
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the site relies on using a specific URL such as a multisite setup (multiple
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domains served from the same codebase).
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{% include 'figure' with {
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image: {
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src: '/images/blog/running-drupal-with-symfony-local-server/proxy.png',
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alt: 'A screenshot of the proxy overview screen, showing three local projects with their local domains, ports and directories.',
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},
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caption: 'The proxy overview screen'
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} only %}
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### Setting up a multisite
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Here’s an example of how I would use local domains to configure a multisite
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Drupal installation (taken from
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<https://github.com/opdavies/symfony-server-drupal-test>).
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The first thing is to add the subdomain to the proxy. In this example, I’m going
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to set up a version of the Umami demo installation profile at
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`https://umami.wip`.
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```bash
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# Add umami.wip to the proxy and attach it to this directory
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symfony proxy:domain:attach umami
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```
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Now we can add it to Drupal’s `sites.php` file to route requests to the correct
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site directory:
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```php
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// web/sites/sites.php
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// This maps https://umami.wip to the sites/umami directory
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$sites['umami.wip'] = 'umami';
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```
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To create the directory, we can duplicate the `default` site directory and its
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contents.
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```
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cp -R web/sites/default web/sites/umami
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```
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To create a separate database, we add a new service to the `docker-compose.yaml`
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file and a new MySQL volume to store the data. We can use labels to generate
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site specific environment variables.
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```diff
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version: '2.1'
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services:
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database:
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image: mysql:5.7
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ports: [3306]
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environment:
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MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: secret
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volumes:
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- mysql-data:/var/lib/mysql
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+ database_umami:
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+ image: mysql:5.7
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+ ports: [3306]
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+ environment:
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+ MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: secret
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+ volumes:
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+ - mysql-data-umami:/var/lib/mysql
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+ labels:
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+ com.symfony.server.service-prefix: 'UMAMI_DATABASE'
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volumes:
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mysql-data:
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+ mysql-data-umami:
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```
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These can then be added to `sites/umami/settings.php`:
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```php
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$databases['default']['default'] = [
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'driver' => $_SERVER['UMAMI_DATABASE_DRIVER'],
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'host' => $_SERVER['UMAMI_DATABASE_HOST'],
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'database' => $_SERVER['UMAMI_DATABASE_NAME'],
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'username' => $_SERVER['UMAMI_DATABASE_USER'],
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'password' => $_SERVER['UMAMI_DATABASE_PASSWORD'],
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'port' => $_SERVER['UMAMI_DATABASE_PORT'],
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'prefix' => '',
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'namespace' => 'Drupal\\Core\\Database\\Driver\\mysql',
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'collation' => 'utf8mb4_general_ci',
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];
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```
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Now that the Umami site is able to connect to its own database, we can install
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Drupal - specifying the installation profile to use and also the site directory
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to target.
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```bash
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symfony php ../vendor/bin/drush site-install \
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demo_umami \
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-l umami \
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--no-interaction
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```
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