Shared Hosting Environment ¶
Shared hosting environments are often quite limited about configuration and directory structure. Still in most cases you can run Yii 2.0 on a shared hosting environment with a few adjustments.
Deploying a basic project template ¶
Since in a shared hosting environment there's typically only one webroot, use the basic project template if you can. Refer to the Installing Yii chapter and install the basic project template locally. After you have the application working locally, we'll make some adjustments so it can be hosted on your shared hosting server.
Renaming webroot ¶
Connect to your shared host using FTP or by other means. You will probably see something like the following.
config
logs
www
In the above, www
is your webserver webroot directory. It could be named differently. Common names are: www
,
htdocs
, and public_html
.
The webroot in our basic project template is named web
. Before uploading the application to your webserver rename
your local webroot to match your server, i.e., from web
to www
, public_html
or whatever the name of your hosting
webroot.
FTP root directory is writeable ¶
If you can write to the root level directory i.e. where config
, logs
and www
are, then upload assets
, commands
etc. as is to the root level directory.
Add extras for webserver ¶
If your webserver is Apache you'll need to add an .htaccess
file with the following content to web
(or public_html
or whatever) (where the index.php
file is located):
Options +FollowSymLinks
IndexIgnore */*
RewriteEngine on
# if a directory or a file exists, use it directly
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
# otherwise forward it to index.php
RewriteRule . index.php
In case of nginx you should not need any extra config files.
Check requirements ¶
In order to run Yii, your webserver must meet its requirements. The very minimum requirement is PHP 5.4. In order to
check the requirements copy requirements.php
from your root directory into the webroot directory and run it via
browser using http://example.com/requirements.php
URL. Don't forget to delete the file afterwards.
Deploying an advanced project template ¶
Deploying an advanced application to shared hosting is a bit trickier than a basic application but it could be achieved. Follow instructions described in advanced project template documentation.