5.5
,8.5-php5.5
(8.5/5.5/Dockerfile)5.6
,8.5-php5.6
,8.5
(8.5/5.6/Dockerfile)5.4
,7.0-php5.4
(7.0/5.4/Dockerfile)9.0
,9.0-php7
,latest
(9.0/7.0/Dockerfile)
For more information about this image and its history, please see the relevant manifest file (library/php-zendserver
). This image is updated via pull requests to the docker-library/official-images
GitHub repo.
For detailed information about the virtual/transfer sizes and individual layers of each of the above supported tags, please see the repos/php-zendserver/tag-details.md
file in the docker-library/repo-info
GitHub repo.
Zend Server is the integrated application platform for PHP mobile and web apps. Zend Server provides you with a highly available PHP production environment which includes, amongst other features, a highly reliable PHP stack, application monitoring, troubleshooting, and the all-new Z-Ray.
Using Zend Server Z-Ray is akin to wearing X-Ray goggles, effortlessly giving developers deep insight into how their code is running as they are developing it – all without having to change any of their habits or workflow. With Z-Ray, developers can immediately understand the impact of their code changes, enabling them to both improve quality and solve issues long before their code reaches production. In addition to the obvious benefits of this ‘Left Shifting’ – better performance, fewer production issues and faster recovery times – using Z-Ray is also downright fun!
Zend Server is the platform that enables Continuous Delivery, which provides consistency, automation and collaboration capabilities throughout the application delivery cycle. Patterns are available to integrate Zend Server with: Chef, Jenkins, Nagios, Vmware, Puppet.
- http://www.zend.com/
- http://kb.zend.com/
- http://files.zend.com/help/Zend-Server/zend-server.htm#faqs.htm
- http://files.zend.com/help/Zend-Server/zend-server.htm#getting_started.htm
This is a cluster-enabled version of a Dockerized Zend Server 8.0 container. With Zend Server on Docker, you'll get your PHP applications up and running on a highly available PHP production environment which includes, amongst other features, a highly reliable PHP stack, application monitoring, troubleshooting, and the new and innovative new technology - Z-Ray. Z-Ray gives developers unprecedented visibility into their code by tracking and displaying in a toolbar live and detailed info on how the various elements constructing their page are performing.
For development purposes we provide you with a trial license that is valid until July-31st-2016. For production use you must provide a valid Zend Server license using the instructions below in the Usage section.
Zend Server is shared on [Docker-Hub] as php-zendserver.
To start a single Zend Server instance, execute:
$ docker run php-zendserver
-
You can specify the PHP and Zend Server version by adding ':' or ':<ZS-version>-php<version>' to the 'docker run' command.
for example: $docker run php-zendserver:8.0-php5.6
- Zend Server 7
- Zend Server 8
- Zend Server 9 (With PHP 7 GA)(Default version)
To start a Zend Server cluster, execute the following command for each cluster node:
$ docker run -e MYSQL_HOSTNAME=<db-ip> -e MYSQL_PORT=3306 -e MYSQL_USERNAME=<username> -e MYSQL_PASSWORD=<password> -e MYSQL_DBNAME=zend php-zendserver
To use your own Zend Server license: $ docker run php-zendserver -e ZEND_LICENSE_KEY= -e ZEND_LICENSE_ORDER=
From a local folder containing this repo's clone, execute the following command to generate the image. The image-id will be outputted:
$ docker build .
To start a single Zend Server instance, execute:
$ docker run <image-id>
To start a Zend Server cluster, execute the following command on each cluster node:
$ docker run -e MYSQL_HOSTNAME=<db-ip> -e MYSQL_PORT=3306 -e MYSQL_USERNAME=<username> -e MYSQL_PASSWORD=<password> -e MYSQL_DBNAME=zend <image-id>
Once started, the container will output the information required to access the PHP application and the Zend Server UI, including an automatically generated admin password.
To access the container remotely, port forwarding must be configured, either manually or using docker. For example, this command redirects port 80 to port 88, and port 10081 (Zend Server UI port) to port 10088:
$ docker run -p 88:80 -p 10088:10081 php-zendserver
To start a Zend Server cluster you must provide a Mysql compatible database:
$ docker run -p 88:80 -p 10088:10081 -e MYSQL_HOSTNAME=<db-ip> -e MYSQL_PORT=3306 -e MYSQL_USERNAME=<username> -e MYSQL_PASSWORD=<password> -e MYSQL_DBNAME=zend <image-id>
Please note, when running multiple instances only one instance can be bound to a port. If you are running a cluster, either assign a port redirect to one node only, or assign a different port to each container.
Application files can be automatically pulled from a Git repo by setting the GIT_URL env var to the repo's URL. Alternatively, if building an image from Dockerfile, place the app files in the "app/" folder.
The files will be copied to the containers /var/www/html folder and defined in Zend Server as the default app. An example index.html file is included. this feature is available in Zend Server 8 and above.
Env variables are passed in the run command with the "-e" switch.
To specify a pre-defined admin password for Zend Server use:
- ZS_ADMIN_PASSWORD
Automatically Deploy an app from Git URL:
- GIT_URL
MySQL vars for clustered ops. ALL are required for the node to properly join a cluster:
- MYSQL_HOSTNAME - ip or hostname of MySQL database
- MYSQL_PORT - MySQL listening port
- MYSQL_USERNAME
- MYSQL_PASSWORD
- MYSQL_DBNAME - Name of the database Zend Server will use for cluster ops (created automatically if it does not exist).
To specify a pre-purchased license use the following env vars:
- ZEND_LICENSE_KEY
- ZEND_LICENSE_ORDER
Set Zend Server to production mode by setting the following env var to "true". By default Zend Server is set to "development mode" with Z-Ray enabled:
- ZS_PRODUCTION
Each Zend Server Docker container requires 1GB of availible memory.
This image is officially supported on Docker version 1.12.0.
Support for older versions (down to 1.6) is provided on a best-effort basis.
Please see the Docker installation documentation for details on how to upgrade your Docker daemon.
Think we’ve missed something? Let us know at: http://www.zend.com/en/support-center