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fly-hello-wordpress

A simple example of running WordPress on Fly.io. It uses the official WordPress Docker image.

Run it locally

At a minimum you need to provide environment variables for a MySQL database: its name, hostname, username and password. That database must already exist (WordPress will not create it):

docker build --tag wordpress-demo .

docker run -p 8080:80 \
-e WORDPRESS_DB_HOST='hostname-here' \
-e WORDPRESS_DB_USER='username-here' \
-e WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD='password-here' \
-e WORDPRESS_DB_NAME='database-name-here' \
wordpress-demo

If you then visit http://localhost:8080/ you should see the WordPress installation page. Pick your language, provide some user details and it will then install into your provided database.

Environment variables

The image supports more environment variables. For example:

docker run -p 8080:80 \
-e WORDPRESS_DEBUG=1 \
-e WORDPRESS_DB_HOST='hostname-here' \
-e WORDPRESS_DB_USER='user-name-here' \
-e WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD='password-here' \
-e WORDPRESS_DB_NAME='database-name-here' \
-e WORDPRESS_TABLE_PREFIX='prefix-here' \
-e WORDPRESS_CONFIG_EXTRA='define("MYSQL_CLIENT_FLAGS", MYSQLI_CLIENT_SSL);' \
-e WORDPRESS_AUTH_KEY='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
-e WORDPRESS_SECURE_AUTH_KEY='get-from-wordpress-generator)' \
-e WORDPRESS_LOGGED_IN_KEY='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
-e WORDPRESS_NONCE_KEY='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
-e WORDPRESS_AUTH_SALT='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
-e WORDPRESS_SECURE_AUTH_SALT='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
-e WORDPRESS_LOGGED_IN_SALT='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
-e WORDPRESS_NONCE_SALT='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
wordpress-demo

The WORDPRESS_DEBUG can be used if you experience any problems and want to see more debugging information.

The WORDPRESS_TABLE_PREFIX is usually wp_ but can be any string. That's useful if your database contains other tables.

The WORDPRESS_CONFIG_EXTRA is used to add additional values to the config file. Here we are using that to specify SSL should be used to connect to a database. That is needed if you want to connect to a PlanetScale database.

The WORDPRESS_AUTH_KEY (and onwards) are security keys/salts. If you change them, all users will be forced to login again. We recommend using their official generator: https://api.wordpress.org/secret-key/1.1/salt. As shown above, the variables it generates need to be prefixed with WORDPRESS_ for the image to recognise them.

Deploy to Fly

If you haven't already done so, install the Fly CLI and then log in to Fly.

We have provided a base fly.toml file which tells Fly how to configure the app. Make sure to change the name at the top to what you plan to call your app, for example your-app-name. You can adjust the other values within it later.

Run fly launch from the application's directory.

The Fly CLI will spot the existing fly.toml:

An existing fly.toml file was found for your-app-name
? Would you like to copy its configuration to the new app? (y/N)

Type y (yes).

The CLI will then spot the Dockerfile:

Scanning source code
Detected a Dockerfile app

You'll be asked to give the app a name. Type in a name using lowercase characters and hyphens. For example your-app-name.

Proceed through the prompts, choosing an organization, a region, and then say N (no) when asked to set up a Postgresql database. Finally, when it says do you want to deploy now, say N (no).

Why not deploy right now? Well, we need some environment variables to be set. At a minimum we need to provide a MySQL database's name, hostname, username and password. We will provide those as secrets.

So next use the fly secrets command to set all of the environment variables not referenced in the [env] section of the fly.toml. For example your command may look like:

fly secrets set \
WORDPRESS_DB_HOST='hostname-here' \
WORDPRESS_DB_USER='user-name-here' \
WORDPRESS_DB_PASSWORD='password-here' \
WORDPRESS_DB_NAME='database-name-here' \
WORDPRESS_TABLE_PREFIX='prefix-here' \
WORDPRESS_AUTH_KEY='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
WORDPRESS_SECURE_AUTH_KEY='get-from-wordpress-generator)' \
WORDPRESS_LOGGED_IN_KEY='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
WORDPRESS_NONCE_KEY='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
WORDPRESS_AUTH_SALT='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
WORDPRESS_SECURE_AUTH_SALT='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
WORDPRESS_LOGGED_IN_SALT='get-from-wordpress-generator' \
WORDPRESS_NONCE_SALT='get-from-wordpress-generator'

That should be successful and say those secrets are staged for the first deployment.

Now you can go ahead and deploy the app. Run fly deploy.

You should see the build proceed, the image pushed to Fly, and it create a release:

==> Monitoring deployment

1 desired, 1 placed, 0 healthy, 0 unhealthy

Once complete type fly open to visit https://your-app-name.fly.dev. After a few seconds you should see the WordPress installation page. Choose your language and click Continue to proceed. On the next page provide the details asked for, click Install Wordpress and it will then add tables to your chosen database. It may take up to 30 seconds. You should then see its success message: "WordPress has been installed. Thank you, and enjoy!".

MySQL database

This guide assumes you already have a MySQL database and so does not cover creating one. You may want to create a Fly app for a MySQL database. Or use an external service such as Planetscale (this repo was tested with a Planetscale database).

Custom theme/plugins?

Please see the documentation for the WordPress image. The .dockerignore and Dockerfile would need adapting to copy those into the image.

Persistent storage

This sample app does not include any persistent storage. Its file system is ephemeral and should be used for temporary data (such as caches). If you do need data to persist (for example uploaded images), you should either upload it to an external store (such as AWS S3) or create a volume.

Custom PHP settings

If you want to use custom PHP settings (overriding the default ones the WordPress image uses) those should go in a php.ini file. Make sure your .dockerignore file does not ignore that. In our case, we would add a line such as !php.ini. The Dockerfile then needs to reference it. So that would need to include a line such as COPY php.ini $PHP_INI_DIR/conf.d/ to make sure it is copied to where WordPress expects it to be.

Errors?

If you see any errors, the first place to check is the log. Run fly logs from within the application's directory. Do you see anything to indicate why?

If the TCP healthchecks fail and your vm is marked as unhealthy, make sure your fly.toml has the app listening on port 80 (internally). Many apps use 8080.

You can try temporarily setting WORDPRESS_DEBUG as 1 within your fly.toml (in the [env] section). That will show additional PHP debug data when you load a page. For example if it complains it can't connect to your database, that can reveal why not.

To check secrets are being correctly set/read, run fly ssh console to SSH in to the vm, then run e.g echo $WORDPRESS_DB_HOST to see the value of that environment variable. If a required one is missing or incorrect, WordPress won't be able to connect to your database.

Misc.

To see what files a built Docker image contains locally, one way is to use dive and then dive [id]. Press tab/spacebar to look at the file tree.

When deployed to Fly, you can SSH in to the vm using fly ssh console and then view the file system. For example cd /var/www/html, and ls -l. You should see the WordPress files (index.php etc).

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