LEMP - Linux Mysql Nginx PHP Install on Ubuntu 20.04
Step 1 – Installing the Nginx Web Server
In order to display web pages to our site visitors, we are going to employ Nginx, a high-performance web server. We’ll use the apt
package manager to obtain this software.
Since this is our first time using apt
for this session, start off by updating your server’s package index. Following that, you can use apt install
to get Nginx installed:
When prompted, enter Y
to confirm that you want to
install Nginx. Once the installation is finished, the Nginx web server
will be active and running on your Ubuntu 20.04 server.
If you have the ufw
firewall enabled, as recommended in
our initial server setup guide, you will need to allow connections to
Nginx. Nginx registers a few different UFW application profiles upon
installation. To check which UFW profiles are available, run:
OutputAvailable applications:
Nginx Full
Nginx HTTP
Nginx HTTPS
OpenSSH
It is recommended that you enable the most restrictive profile that
will still allow the traffic you need. Since you haven’t configured SSL
for your server in this guide, you will only need to allow regular HTTP
traffic on port 80
.
Enable this by typing:
You can verify the change by running:
This command’s output will show that HTTP traffic is now allowed:
OutputStatus: active
To Action From
-- ------ ----
OpenSSH ALLOW Anywhere
Nginx HTTP ALLOW Anywhere
OpenSSH (v6) ALLOW Anywhere (v6)
Nginx HTTP (v6) ALLOW Anywhere (v6)
With the new firewall rule added, you can test if the server is up and running by accessing your server’s domain name or public IP address in your web browser.
If you do not have a domain name pointed at your server and you do not know your server’s public IP address, you can find it by running the following command:
This will print out a few IP addresses. You can try each of them in turn in your web browser.
As an alternative, you can check which IP address is accessible, as viewed from other locations on the internet:
Type the address that you receive in your web browser and it will take you to Nginx’s default landing page:
http://server_domain_or_IP
If you see this page, it means you have successfully installed Nginx and enabled HTTP traffic for your web server.
Step 2 — Installing MySQL
Now that you have a web server up and running, you need to install the database system to be able to store and manage data for your site. MySQL is a popular database management system used within PHP environments.
Again, use apt
to acquire and install this software:
When prompted, confirm installation by typing Y
, and then ENTER
.
When the installation is finished, it’s recommended that you run a security script that comes pre-installed with MySQL. This script will remove some insecure default settings and lock down access to your database system. Start the interactive script by running:
This will ask if you want to configure the VALIDATE PASSWORD PLUGIN
.
Note: Enabling this feature is
something of a judgment call. If enabled, passwords which don’t match
the specified criteria will be rejected by MySQL with an error. It is
safe to leave validation disabled, but you should always use strong,
unique passwords for database credentials.
Answer Y
for yes, or anything else to continue without enabling.
VALIDATE PASSWORD PLUGIN can be used to test passwords
and improve security. It checks the strength of password
and allows the users to set only those passwords which are
secure enough. Would you like to setup VALIDATE PASSWORD plugin?
Press y|Y for Yes, any other key for No:
If you answer “yes”, you’ll be asked to select a level of password validation. Keep in mind that if you enter 2
for the strongest level, you will receive errors when attempting to set
any password which does not contain numbers, upper and lowercase
letters, and special characters, or which is based on common dictionary
words.
There are three levels of password validation policy:
LOW Length >= 8
MEDIUM Length >= 8, numeric, mixed case, and special characters
STRONG Length >= 8, numeric, mixed case, special characters and dictionary file
Please enter 0 = LOW, 1 = MEDIUM and 2 = STRONG: 1
Regardless of whether you chose to set up the VALIDATE PASSWORD PLUGIN
, your server will next ask you to select and confirm a password for the MySQL root user. This is not to be confused with the system root. The database root
user is an administrative user with full privileges over the database
system. Even though the default authentication method for the MySQL root
user dispenses the use of a password, even when one is set, you should define a strong password here as an additional safety measure. We’ll talk about this in a moment.
If you enabled password validation, you’ll be shown the password
strength for the root password you just entered and your server will ask
if you want to continue with that password. If you are happy with your
current password, enter Y
for “yes” at the prompt:
Estimated strength of the password: 100
Do you wish to continue with the password provided?(Press y|Y for Yes, any other key for No) : y
For the rest of the questions, press Y
and hit the ENTER
key at each prompt. This will remove some anonymous users and the test
database, disable remote root logins, and load these new rules so that
MySQL immediately respects the changes you have made.
When you’re finished, test if you’re able to log in to the MySQL console by typing:
This will connect to the MySQL server as the administrative database user root, which is inferred by the use of sudo
when running this command. You should see output like this:
OutputWelcome to the MySQL monitor. Commands end with ; or \g.
Your MySQL connection id is 22
Server version: 8.0.19-0ubuntu5 (Ubuntu)
Copyright (c) 2000, 2020, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Oracle is a registered trademark of Oracle Corporation and/or its
affiliates. Other names may be trademarks of their respective
owners.
Type 'help;' or '\h' for help. Type '\c' to clear the current input statement.
mysql>
To exit the MySQL console, type:
Notice that you didn’t need to provide a password to connect as the root user, even though you have defined one when running the mysql_secure_installation
script. That is because the default authentication method for the administrative MySQL user is unix_socket
instead of password
.
Even though this might look like a security concern at first, it makes
the database server more secure because the only users allowed to log in
as the root MySQL user are the system users with sudo
privileges connecting from the console or through an application running
with the same privileges. In practical terms, that means you won’t be
able to use the administrative database root user to connect from your PHP application. Setting a password for the root MySQL account works as a safeguard, in case the default authentication method is changed from unix_socket
to password
.
For increased security, it’s best to have dedicated user accounts with less expansive privileges set up for every database, especially if you plan on having multiple databases hosted on your server.
Your MySQL server is now installed and secured. Next, we’ll install PHP, the final component in the LEMP stack.
Step 3 – Installing PHP
You have Nginx installed to serve your content and MySQL installed to store and manage your data. Now you can install PHP to process code and generate dynamic content for the web server.
While Apache embeds the PHP interpreter in each request, Nginx
requires an external program to handle PHP processing and act as a
bridge between the PHP interpreter itself and the web server. This
allows for a better overall performance in most PHP-based websites, but
it requires additional configuration. You’ll need to install php-fpm
,
which stands for “PHP fastCGI process manager”, and tell Nginx to pass
PHP requests to this software for processing. Additionally, you’ll need php-mysql
,
a PHP module that allows PHP to communicate with MySQL-based databases.
Core PHP packages will automatically be installed as dependencies.
To install the php-fpm
and php-mysql
packages, run:
When prompted, type Y
and ENTER
to confirm installation.
You now have your PHP components installed. Next, you’ll configure Nginx to use them.
Step 4 — Configuring Nginx to Use the PHP Processor
When using the Nginx web server, we can create server blocks (similar to virtual hosts in Apache) to encapsulate configuration details and host more than one domain on a single server. In this guide, we’ll use your_domain as an example domain name.
On Ubuntu 20.04, Nginx has one server block enabled by default and is configured to serve documents out of a directory at /var/www/html
.
While this works well for a single site, it can become difficult to
manage if you are hosting multiple sites. Instead of modifying /var/www/html
, we’ll create a directory structure within /var/www
for the your_domain website, leaving /var/www/html
in place as the default directory to be served if a client request doesn’t match any other sites.
Create the root web directory for your_domain as follows:
Next, assign ownership of the directory with the $USER environment variable, which will reference your current system user:
Then, open a new configuration file in Nginx’s sites-available
directory using your preferred command-line editor. Here, we’ll use nano
:
This will create a new blank file. Paste in the following bare-bones configuration:
Here’s what each of these directives and location blocks do:
listen
— Defines what port Nginx will listen on. In this case, it will listen on port80
, the default port for HTTP.root
— Defines the document root where the files served by this website are stored.index
— Defines in which order Nginx will prioritize index files for this website. It is a common practice to listindex.html
files with a higher precedence thanindex.php
files to allow for quickly setting up a maintenance landing page in PHP applications. You can adjust these settings to better suit your application needs.server_name
— Defines which domain names and/or IP addresses this server block should respond for. Point this directive to your server’s domain name or public IP address.location /
— The first location block includes atry_files
directive, which checks for the existence of files or directories matching a URI request. If Nginx cannot find the appropriate resource, it will return a 404 error.location ~ \.php$
— This location block handles the actual PHP processing by pointing Nginx to thefastcgi-php.conf
configuration file and thephp7.4-fpm.sock
file, which declares what socket is associated withphp-fpm
.location ~ /\.ht
— The last location block deals with.htaccess
files, which Nginx does not process. By adding thedeny all
directive, if any.htaccess
files happen to find their way into the document root ,they will not be served to visitors.
When you’re done editing, save and close the file. If you’re using nano
, you can do so by typing CTRL+X
and then y
and ENTER
to confirm.
Activate your configuration by linking to the config file from Nginx’s sites-enabled
directory:
This will tell Nginx to use the configuration next time it is reloaded. You can test your configuration for syntax errors by typing:
If any errors are reported, go back to your configuration file to review its contents before continuing.
When you are ready, reload Nginx to apply the changes:
Your new website is now active, but the web root /var/www/your_domain
is still empty. Create an index.html
file in that location so that we can test that your new server block works as expected:
Include the following content in this file:
Now go to your browser and access your server’s domain name or IP address, as listed within the server_name
directive in your server block configuration file:
http://server_domain_or_IP
You’ll see a page like this:
If you see this page, it means your Nginx server block is working as expected.
You can leave this file in place as a temporary landing page for your application until you set up an index.php
file to replace it. Once you do that, remember to remove or rename the index.html
file from your document root, as it would take precedence over an index.php
file by default.
Your LEMP stack is now fully configured. In the next step, we’ll
create a PHP script to test that Nginx is in fact able to handle .php
files within your newly configured website.
Step 5 –Testing PHP with Nginx
Your LEMP stack should now be completely set up. You can test it to validate that Nginx can correctly hand .php
files off to your PHP processor.
You can do this by creating a test PHP file in your document root. Open a new file called info.php
within your document root in your text editor:
Type or paste the following lines into the new file. This is valid PHP code that will return information about your server:
When you are finished, save and close the file by typing CTRL
+X
and then y
and ENTER
to confirm.
You can now access this page in your web browser by visiting the
domain name or public IP address you’ve set up in your Nginx
configuration file, followed by /info.php
:
http://server_domain_or_IP/info.php
You will see a web page containing detailed information about your server:
After checking the relevant information about your PHP server through
that page, it’s best to remove the file you created as it contains
sensitive information about your PHP environment and your Ubuntu server.
You can use rm
to remove that file:
You can always regenerate this file if you need it later.
Step 6 — Testing Database Connection from PHP (Optional)
If you want to test whether PHP is able to connect to MySQL and execute database queries, you can create a test table with dummy data and query for its contents from a PHP script. Before we can do that, we need to create a test database and a new MySQL user properly configured to access it.
At the time of this writing, the native MySQL PHP library mysqlnd
doesn’t support caching_sha2_authentication
, the default authentication method for MySQL 8. We’ll need to create a new user with the mysql_native_password
authentication method in order to be able to connect to the MySQL database from PHP.
We’ll create a database named example_database and a user named example_user, but you can replace these names with different values.
First, connect to the MySQL console using the root account:
To create a new database, run the following command from your MySQL console:
Now you can create a new user and grant them full privileges on the custom database you’ve just created.
The following command creates a new user named example_user
, using mysql_native_password
as default authentication method. We’re defining this user’s password as password
, but you should replace this value with a secure password of your own choosing.
Now we need to give this user permission over the example_database
database:
This will give the example_user user full privileges over the example_database database, while preventing this user from creating or modifying other databases on your server.
Now exit the MySQL shell with:
You can test if the new user has the proper permissions by logging in to the MySQL console again, this time using the custom user credentials:
Notice the -p
flag in this command, which will prompt you for the password used when creating the example_user user. After logging in to the MySQL console, confirm that you have access to the example_database database:
This will give you the following output:
Output+--------------------+
| Database |
+--------------------+
| example_database |
| information_schema |
+--------------------+
2 rows in set (0.000 sec)
Next, we’ll create a test table named todo_list. From the MySQL console, run the following statement:
Insert a few rows of content in the test table. You might want to repeat the next command a few times, using different values:
To confirm that the data was successfully saved to your table, run:
You’ll see the following output:
Output+---------+--------------------------+
| item_id | content |
+---------+--------------------------+
| 1 | My first important item |
| 2 | My second important item |
| 3 | My third important item |
| 4 | and this one more thing |
+---------+--------------------------+
4 rows in set (0.000 sec)
After confirming that you have valid data in your test table, you can exit the MySQL console:
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