chiron/chiron-skeleton

A pre-configured skeleton for the Chiron microframework

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0.7 2018-10-13 14:31 UTC

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README

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#Chiron-Skeleton

Skeleton for Chiron microframework.

Getting Started

Start your new Chiron project with composer:

$ composer create-project chiron/chiron-skeleton <project-path>

After choosing and installing the packages you want, go to the <project-path> and start PHP's built-in web server to verify installation:

$ composer start --timeout=0 serve

You can then browse to http://localhost:8080.

Linux users

On PHP versions prior to 7.1.14 and 7.2.2, this command might not work as expected due to a bug in PHP that only affects linux environments. In such scenarios, you will need to start the built-in web server yourself, using the following command:

$ php -S 0.0.0.0:8080 -t public/ public/index.php

Setting a timeout

Composer commands time out after 300 seconds (5 minutes). On Linux-based systems, the php -S command that composer serve spawns continues running as a background process, but on other systems halts when the timeout occurs.

As such, we recommend running the serve script using a timeout. This can be done by using composer run to execute the serve script, with a --timeout option. When set to 0, as in the previous example, no timeout will be used, and it will run until you cancel the process (usually via Ctrl-C). Alternately, you can specify a finite timeout; as an example, the following will extend the timeout to a full day:

$ composer run --timeout=86400 serve

Setup environment variables

The root directory of your application contain a .env.example file used to store the environment variables (password, cache driver...etc). If you install Chiron via Composer, this file will automatically be renamed to .env. Otherwise, you should rename the file manually. This file is ignored by Git so all developers working on the project can have their own configuration.

The .env file should only be used in development/testing/staging environments. For production environments, use "real" environment variables. But to avoid accident there is a .htaccess file in the 'app' directory, this should at least give you protection from exposing passwords and other sensitive info in your .env files