This page is meant to help those configuring PHP and the web server it is running on to be very secure.
Below you will find information on the proper settings for the php.ini
file and instructions on configuring Apache, Nginx, and Caddy web servers.
For general PHP codebase security please refer to the two following great guides:
Some of following settings need to be adapted to your system, in particular session.save_path
, session.cookie_path
(e.g. /var/www/mysite
), and session.cookie_domain
(e.g. ExampleSite.com
).
You should also be running PHP 7.2 or later. If running PHP 7.0 and 7.1, you will use slightly different values in a couple of places below (see inline comments). Finally look through the PHP Manual for a complete reference on every value in the php.ini configuration file.
You can find a copy of the following values in a ready-to-go php.ini file here.
expose_php = Off
error_reporting = E_ALL
display_errors = Off
display_startup_errors = Off
log_errors = On
error_log = /valid_path/PHP-logs/php_error.log
ignore_repeated_errors = Off
Keep in mind that you need to have display_errors
to Off
on a production server and it's a good idea to frequently notice the logs.
doc_root = /path/DocumentRoot/PHP-scripts/
open_basedir = /path/DocumentRoot/PHP-scripts/
include_path = /path/PHP-pear/
extension_dir = /path/PHP-extensions/
mime_magic.magicfile = /path/PHP-magic.mime
allow_url_fopen = Off
allow_url_include = Off
variables_order = "GPCS"
allow_webdav_methods = Off
session.gc_maxlifetime = 600
allow_url_*
prevents LFIs to be easily escalated to RFIs.
file_uploads = On
upload_tmp_dir = /path/PHP-uploads/
upload_max_filesize = 2M
max_file_uploads = 2
If your application is not using file uploads, and say the only data the user will enter / upload is forms that do not require any document attachments, file_uploads
should be turned Off
.
enable_dl = Off
disable_functions = system, exec, shell_exec, passthru, phpinfo, show_source, highlight_file, popen, proc_open, fopen_with_path, dbmopen, dbase_open, putenv, move_uploaded_file, chdir, mkdir, rmdir, chmod, rename, filepro, filepro_rowcount, filepro_retrieve, posix_mkfifo
# see also: http://ir.php.net/features.safe-mode
disable_classes =
These are dangerous PHP functions. You should disable all that you don't use.
Session settings are some of the MOST important values to concentrate on in configuring. It is a good practice to change session.name
to something new.
session.save_path = /path/PHP-session/
session.name = myPHPSESSID
session.auto_start = Off
session.use_trans_sid = 0
session.cookie_domain = full.qualified.domain.name
#session.cookie_path = /application/path/
session.use_strict_mode = 1
session.use_cookies = 1
session.use_only_cookies = 1
session.cookie_lifetime = 14400 # 4 hours
session.cookie_secure = 1
session.cookie_httponly = 1
session.cookie_samesite = Strict
session.cache_expire = 30
session.sid_length = 256
session.sid_bits_per_character = 6 # PHP 7.2+
session.hash_function = 1 # PHP 7.0-7.1
session.hash_bits_per_character = 6 # PHP 7.0-7.1
session.referer_check = /application/path
memory_limit = 50M
post_max_size = 20M
max_execution_time = 60
report_memleaks = On
track_errors = Off
html_errors = Off
Suhosin is a patch to PHP which provides a number of hardening and security features that are not available in the default PHP build. However, Suhosin only works with PHP 5, which is unsupported and should not be used.
For PHP 7, there is Suhosin-ng, but it's in a prerelease stage, and as such should not be used in production.
Snuffleupagus is the spiritual descendent of Suhosin for PHP 7 and onwards, with modern features. It's considered stable, and is usable in production.