Development environment for Laravel with Vue-JS
Install apache2, php 7.4, mariadb, phpmyadmin, composer, Laravel and VueJS on Linux Mint
August 2020
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1 Install apache2, php 7.4, mariadb, phpmyadmin, composer, Laravel and VueJS on Linux Mint
- 2 1. Apache2
- 3 2. PHP 7.4
- 4 3. MariaDB
- 5 4. PHPMyAdmin
- 5.1 4.1 Install dependencies with:
- 5.2 4.2 Activate the modules
- 5.3 4.3 Download the latest stable version with
- 5.4 4.4 Make directory for PHPMyAdmin
- 5.5 4.5 Copy files in place:
- 5.6 4.6 Allow access to apache
- 5.7 4.7 Tell Apache hat phpmyadmin exists
- 5.8 4.8 Activate the configuration
- 5.9 4.9 Securing PHPMyAdmin
- 5.10 4.10 Secret passphrase for cookie-authentication
- 5.11 4.11 Warning about configuration storage
- 6 5. Composer
- 7 6. NodeJS and NPM
- 8 7. Laravel
- 8.1 7.1 Laravel installer
- 8.2 7.2 Create a new Laravel project
- 8.3 7.3 Create webconfiguration for this project
- 9 8. Create Database and User
- 10 9. Give Laravel access to the databases
- 11 A. Extras
1. Apache2
1.1 Installation
As the Apache-webserver is part of the most distributions repositories install it with:
sudo apt install apache2
1.2 Check successful installation
sudo systemctl status apache2
2. PHP 7.4
As some parts need PHP 7.3 or higher we will use PHP 7.4 which is the highes stable vesrion at the moment.
2.1 PHP PPA
PHP 7.3 and PHP 7.4 are not available from the repositories of the distributions. So we will use a PPA (Private Public Archive). Be aware of possible security issues when using PPA's. The newest PHP versions as by now (August 2020) can be found at the PPA from Ondřej Surý.
So lets add that:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ondrej/php sudo apt update
2.2 Install PHP 7.4
sudo apt install php7.4
To check it enter
php -v
It should show version 7.4
3. MariaDB
3.1 Install MariaDB server
For the installation see also the repository configuration page of MariaDB at: https://downloads.mariadb.org/mariadb/repositories/
sudo apt-get install software-properties-common sudo apt-key adv --fetch-keys 'https://mariadb.org/mariadb_release_signing_key.asc' sudo add-apt-repository 'deb [arch=amd64,arm64,ppc64el] http://ftp.nluug.nl/db/mariadb/repo/10.5/ubuntu bionic main'
Once this is ready get the MariaDB-server installed with:
sudo apt update sudo apt install mariadb-server
Note!: In my case the mirrorserver is at ftp.nluug.nl. In your case it may vary. So check the commands with the repository configuration page of MariaDB. See link above.
3.2 Securing MariaDB
The secure (harden) your MariaDB installation use the following command:
sudo mysql_secure_installation
and follow the instructions.
3.3 Add user with admin privileges
Don’t use the root user at all. Via the command above remote access for root is prohibited. So you need another user with admin rights to allow remote login and administer your MariaDB installation.
3.3.1 Log in MariaDB a last time as root with:
mysql -u root -p
Enter the above in part 3.2 created password.
3.3.2 Add a user with:
CREATE USER IF NOT EXISTS 'username' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
3.3.3 Give all necessary rights / permissions to this user:
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON *.* TO 'username' IDENTIFIED BY 'password' with grant option;
3.3.4 Make it active with:
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
3.3.5 Verify all is correct with:
SHOW GRANTS FOR 'username';
And log out as root and log in back as the new user. It should be successful.
3.4 No remote access if installed on server
If you can not access mariadb from a remote client, it is possible that mariadb is only listening on 127.0.0.1. Security setting!
TODO: To change that, further info is provided in the near future!
4. PHPMyAdmin
4.1 Install dependencies with:
sudo apt install php7.4-mysql php7.4-mbstring php7.4-zip unzip
4.2 Activate the modules
sudo phpenmod mysqli mbstring zip
4.3 Download the latest stable version with
wget https://www.phpmyadmin.net/downloads/phpMyAdmin-latest-all-languages.zip
unzip it:
unzip phpMyAdmin-latest-all-languages.zip
4.4 Make directory for PHPMyAdmin
sudo mkdir /var/www/phpmyadmin
4.5 Copy files in place:
sudo cp -r phpMyAdmin-*/* /var/www/phpmyadmin/
4.6 Allow access to apache
sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/phpmyadmin sudo chmod -R 755 /var/www/phpmyadmin
4.7 Tell Apache hat phpmyadmin exists
To access PHPMyAdmin at www.domain.com/phpmyadmin you have to tell apache to do so by adding a configuration.
So create one with:
sudo vi /etc/apache2/conf-available/phpmyadmin.conf
With this content:
Alias /phpmyadmin /var/www/phpmyadmin/ <Directory /var/www/phpmyadmin/> AllowOverride all </Directory>
4.8 Activate the configuration
sudo a2enconf phpmyadmin sudo systemctl reload apache2
4.9 Securing PHPMyAdmin
For security reasons and in a production environment it is recommended to harden access to the phpmyadmin directory with an .htaccess file and password
4.9.1 Create an .htaccess file with
sudo vi /var/www/phpmyadmin/.htaccess
with the following content:
AuthType Basic AuthName "Restricted Files" AuthUserFile /var/www/phpmyadmin/.htpasswd Require valid-user
4.9.2 Create the .htpasswd file
sudo htpasswd -c /var/www/phpmyadmin/.htpasswd <username>
Choose a password different then the passwords you use in MariaDB for extra security.
When ready you should be prompted for a password when attempting to open phpmyadmin.
4.10 Secret passphrase for cookie-authentication
After the installation and your first login in to phpMyAdmin you’ll see a warning about the missing secret passphrase.
Open config.inc.php. Rename config.sample.inc.php to config.inc.php if you haven’t done that yet.
sudo vi /var/www/phpmyadmin/config.inc.php
or
sudo mv /var/www/phpmyadmin/config.sample.inc.php /var/www/phpmyadmin/config.inc.php sudo vi /var/www/phpmyadmin/config.inc.php
Change the line with
$cfg['blowfish_secret'] = ; /* YOU MUST FILL IN THIS FOR COOKIE AUTH! */
to
$cfg['blowfish_secret'] = '<verysecretpassword>'; /* YOU MUST FILL IN THIS FOR COOKIE AUTH! */
where <verysecretpassword> must be 32 characters long.
You don’t have to remember this password, so I can be a happy mix of chars, numbers and special characters you like.
Never use a password you use in production.
A possible way to get a password is with openssl:
openssl rand -base64 32
That will create an output like
lQjnenlFAaGbeBvFGNWotx2wuQwa80NphNZ7bETSlkY=
4.11 Warning about configuration storage
You may see this warning at the startscreen
The phpMyAdmin configuration storage is not completely configured, some extended features have been deactivated. To find out why click here.
To get rid of it click on the link. phpMyAdmin will show you a new message with a link ('Create'). Click on it and it should create all necessary settings and database table.
5. Composer
Note: Do this in your homedir!
Install composer on your system following the instructions on their website to get the latest: Install composer
Beware that this commands may change on new releases. Below is only an example.
For the actual installation instructions look at the composer website.
php -r "copy('https://getcomposer.org/installer', 'composer-setup.php');"
php -r "if (hash_file('sha384', 'composer-setup.php') === 'e5325b19b381bfd88ce90a5ddb7823406b2a38cff6bb704b0acc289a09c8128d4a8ce2bbafcd1fcbdc38666422fe2806') { echo 'Installer verified'; } else { echo 'Installer corrupt'; unlink('composer-setup.php'); } echo PHP_EOL;"
php composer-setup.php --install-dir=bin --filename=composer
php -r "unlink('composer-setup.php');"
6. NodeJS and NPM
6.1 Official install instructions per version:
6.2 tl;dr
curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_12.x | sudo -E bash - sudo apt-get install -y nodejs
6.3 Verify the version(s)
node -v
should respond with something like
v12.18.3
and
npm -v
should respond with something like
6.14.6
7. Laravel
7.1 Laravel installer
Install it via composer.
composer global require laravel/installer
7.1.1 Add the path to the laravel installer binary
Note: If you decide to install it in an other place then your own bin, you must add the path to it in your $PATH envvariable.
Edit $HOME/.profile
Mine looks like this:
# ~/.profile: executed by the command interpreter for login shells.
# This file is not read by bash(1), if ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bash_login
# exists.
# see /usr/share/doc/bash/examples/startup-files for examples.
# the files are located in the bash-doc package.
# the default umask is set in /etc/profile; for setting the umask
# for ssh logins, install and configure the libpam-umask package.
#umask 022
# if running bash
if [ -n "$BASH_VERSION" ]; then
# include .bashrc if it exists
if [ -f "$HOME/.bashrc" ]; then
. "$HOME/.bashrc"
fi
fi
# set PATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists
if [ -d "$HOME/bin" ] ; then
PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH"
fi
# set PATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists
if [ -d "$HOME/.local/bin" ] ; then
PATH="$HOME/.local/bin:$PATH"
fi
Add the following to the end of the file:
# set PATH so it includes the path to the composers binary if it exists
if [ -d "$HOME/.config/composer/vendor/bin" ] ; then
PATH="$HOME/.config/composer/vendor/bin:$PATH"
fi
The exact location can be found by the following command:
composer global about
7.1.2 Activate the laravel installer
To get access to the binary the path must be known. As you added it into your .profile file it must be reread. To do so, relogin.
7.2 Create a new Laravel project
7.2.1 PHP-dependencies
The installer requires the php-xml dependency. So install it with:
sudo apt install php7.4-xml
7.2.2 Create new project
Go to the location where your project should live and execute:
laravel new <projectsname>
After that cd into the new project directory.
7.2.3 Frontend Scaffolding aka get an UserInterface (UI)
Go to your projects root directory.
7.2.3.1 Install the laravel ui
composer require laravel/ui
7.2.3.2 Get the Vue-JS components
php artisan ui vue
7.2.3.3 Bootstrap
With the installation of the vue ui also Bootstrap is installed. Open package.json in the projects root folder to verify.
7.2.3.4 Content package.json
"devDependencies": {
"axios": "^0.19",
"bootstrap": "^4.0.0", ← There it is!!!
"cross-env": "^7.0",
"jquery": "^3.2",
"laravel-mix": "^5.0.1",
"lodash": "^4.17.19",
"popper.js": "^1.12",
"resolve-url-loader": "^2.3.1",
"sass": "^1.20.1",
"sass-loader": "^8.0.0",
"vue": "^2.5.17",
"vue-template-compiler": "^2.6.10"
}
So we can use it now.
You will see a notice on the terminalwindow to use npm to install everything needed.
npm install && npm run dev
7.2.3.5 Warnings
A number of warnings can be shown. At the time of writing this, i get the following warnings
npm WARN deprecated popper.js@1.16.1: You can find the new Popper v2 at @popperjs/core, this package is dedicated to the legacy v1
npm WARN optional SKIPPING OPTIONAL DEPENDENCY: fsevents@2.1.3 (node_modules/watchpack/node_modules/fsevents):
npm WARN notsup SKIPPING OPTIONAL DEPENDENCY: Unsupported platform for fsevents@2.1.3: wanted {"os":"darwin","arch":"any"} (current: {"os":"linux","arch":"x64"})
npm WARN optional SKIPPING OPTIONAL DEPENDENCY: fsevents@1.2.13 (node_modules/fsevents):
npm WARN notsup SKIPPING OPTIONAL DEPENDENCY: Unsupported platform for fsevents@1.2.13: wanted {"os":"darwin","arch":"any"} (current: {"os":"linux","arch":"x64"})
The warnings about fsevents can be ignored as it is indeed an unsupportde platform and fsevents will not be used anyway.
Update it with
npm install @popperjs/core --save
7.2.3.6 Severity vulnarability
You also will get this message
found 1 low severity vulnerability run `npm audit fix` to fix them, or `npm audit` for details
If you execute npm audit fix it will come with a message that it could not be automatically fixed
fixed 0 of 1 vulnerability in 1093 scanned packages 1 vulnerability required manual review and could not be updated
So lets look what is going on with
npm audit
I get this
=== npm audit security report ===
┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Manual Review │
│ Some vulnerabilities require your attention to resolve │
│ │
│ Visit https://go.npm.me/audit-guide for additional guidance │
└──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
┌───────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Low │ Prototype Pollution │
├───────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Package │ yargs-parser │
├───────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Patched in │ >=13.1.2 <14.0.0 || >=15.0.1 <16.0.0 || >=18.1.2 │
├───────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Dependency of │ laravel-mix [dev] │
├───────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Path │ laravel-mix > yargs > yargs-parser │
├───────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ More info │ https://npmjs.com/advisories/1500 │
└───────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
found 1 low severity vulnerability in 1093 scanned packages
1 vulnerability requires manual review. See the full report for details.
Until today there is no solution for this. The main cause seems laravel-mix which uses an older version of the yargs-parser. See also here: Issue on github
7.2.3.7 BootstrapVue
To be written yet....
7.2.5 File and directory permissions
I assume that these settings are correct after the installation, but if not set them as follows:
7.2.5.1 Files
sudo find <laravel-rootdirectory> -type f -exec chmod 644 {} \;
7.2.5.2 Directories
sudo find <laravel-rootdirectory> -type d -exec chmod 755 {} \;
7.2.7 Give apache the right to write to storage (upload, logs…) and cache
Go to your projects root directory and execute the following commands:
sudo chgrp -R www-data storage bootstrap/cache sudo chmod -R ug+rwx storage bootstrap/cache
7.3 Create webconfiguration for this project
7.3.1 Create a new config file with:
sudo vi /etc/apache2/sites-available/www.my-website.localhost.conf
and insert this content:
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerAdmin webmaster@localhost
ServerName my-website.localhost
ServerAlias www.my-website.localhost
DocumentRoot /path/to/your/project/public/
LogLevel debug
ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log
CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/access.log combined
<Directory /path/to/your/project/public/>
Options Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
AllowOverride All
Order allow,deny
allow from all
Require all granted
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
Where my-website.localhost should be your website name / address and the ServerAdmin email should be your actual email address for that website admin.
DocumentRoot should be the path to your website files.
If you decide to keep the logfiles apart for each website, for instance at
${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/my-website/error.log
don’t forget to add a subdirectory to /var/log/apache or apache won't start.
sudo mkdir /var/log/apache/my-website
7.3.2 Activate the new website and deactivate the default one
sudo a2ensite www.my-website.localhost.conf sudo a2dissite 000-default.conf sudo systemctl restart apache2
7.3.3 Alias the website in your /etc/hosts for easy access vie your browser
Open the file with:
sudo vi /etc/hosts
and add
127.0.0.1www.my-website.localhost
8. Create Database and User
8.1 Create Database in PHPMyAdmin
Open PHPMyAdmin in your browser (www.my-website.com/phpmyadmin) and click on New on the left panel or go to the databases tab and create there a new one.
I prefer utf8mb4_unicode_ci as collation.
8.2 Create a User for this databases
In PHPMyAdmin go to the Userstab. If you don’t see it (because you are on the databasetab for instance), first go back to the startpage.
Add a user by clicking on Add User. The new user can have only local access if app and database are on the same server / machine, but if not choose any host.
8.3 Grant user rights to the databases
In the user tab click on Edit privileges to go to the user preferences page.
There click on the database button and select the database your user should get the rights to and click ok.
On the next screen grant rights to data and structure by checking the boxes and click ok.
8.3 Verify the new username
Log out of PHPMyAdmin and login again with the new created user and password. If successful you should only see the database you granted the permissions to.
9. Give Laravel access to the databases
9.1 Edit the .env file
Open the .env file in your editor of choice (I use Atom for development) and set the DB_ variables according the data you used to create the database and user.
As an example
DB_CONNECTION=mysql DB_HOST=127.0.0.1 DB_PORT=3306 DB_DATABASE=MyDB DB_USERNAME=MyDBUser DB_PASSWORD=MYDBPassword
Save that changes.
9.2 First migration
Go to projects root directory in your shell and execute the following command.
php artisan migrate:install
You should be answered with:
Migration table created successfully.
In your database a new table migrations is created. Here all migrations will be stored.
Now execute
php artisan migrate
The response will show that a user table, a password reset table and failed jobs table are created.
Migrating: 2014_10_12_000000_create_users_table Migrated: 2014_10_12_000000_create_users_table (0.02 seconds) Migrating: 2014_10_12_100000_create_password_resets_table Migrated: 2014_10_12_100000_create_password_resets_table (0.02 seconds) Migrating: 2019_08_19_000000_create_failed_jobs_table Migrated: 2019_08_19_000000_create_failed_jobs_table (0.01 seconds)
A. Extras
Atom addons for developing Laravel projects
- Language-blade
- Blade-snippets
- Blade spacer
- Language-vue
- Vue-snippets