# Using FrankenPHP Workers Boot your application once and keep it in memory. FrankenPHP will handle incoming requests in a few milliseconds. ## Starting Worker Scripts ### Docker Set the value of the `FRANKENPHP_CONFIG` environment variable to `worker /path/to/your/worker/script.php`: ```console docker run \ -e APP_RUNTIME=Runtime\\FrankenPhpSymfony\\Runtime \ -v $PWD:/app \ -p 80:80 -p 443:443 \ dunglas/frankenphp ``` ### Standalone Binary Use the `--worker` option of the `php-server` command to serve the content of the current directory using a worker: ```console ./frankenphp php-server --worker /path/to/your/worker/script.php ``` ## Symfony Runtime The worker mode of FrankenPHP is supported by the [Symfony Runtime Component](https://symfony.com/doc/current/components/runtime.html). To start any Symfony application in a worker, install the FrankenPHP package of [PHP Runtime](https://github.com/php-runtime/runtime): ```console composer require runtime/frankenphp-symfony ``` Start your app server by defining the `APP_RUNTIME` environment variable to use the FrankenPHP Symfony Runtime: ```console docker run \ -e FRANKENPHP_CONFIG="worker ./public/index.php" \ -e APP_RUNTIME=Runtime\\FrankenPhpSymfony\\Runtime \ -v $PWD:/app \ -p 80:80 -p 443:443 \ dunglas/frankenphp ``` ## Laravel Octane See [this Pull Request](https://github.com/laravel/octane/pull/764). ## Custom Apps The following example shows how to create your own worker script without relying on a third-party library: ```php boot(); $nbRequests = 0; do { $handler = static function () use ($myApp) { // Called when a request is received, // superglobals, php://input and the like are reset echo $myApp->handle($_GET, $_POST, $_COOKIE, $_FILES, $_SERVER); }; $running = \frankenphp_handle_request($handler); // Do something after sending the HTTP response $myApp->terminate(); // Call the garbage collector to reduce the chances of it being triggered in the middle of a page generation gc_collect_cycles(); } while ($running && !(isset($_SERVER['MAX_REQUESTS']) && ++$nbRequests >= $_SERVER['MAX_REQUESTS'])); // Cleanup $myApp->shutdown(); ``` Then, start your app and use the `FRANKENPHP_CONFIG` environment variable to configure your worker: ```console docker run \ -e FRANKENPHP_CONFIG="worker ./public/index.php" \ -v $PWD:/app \ -p 80:80 -p 443:443 \ dunglas/frankenphp ``` By default, one worker per CPU is started. You can also configure the number of workers to start: ```console docker run \ -e FRANKENPHP_CONFIG="worker ./public/index.php 42" \ -v $PWD:/app \ -p 80:80 -p 443:443 \ dunglas/frankenphp ``` ### Restart the Worker After a Certain Number of Requests As PHP was not originally designed for long-running processes, there are still many libraries and legacy codes that leak memory. A workaround to using this type of code in worker mode is to restart the worker script after processing a certain number of requests: The previous worker snippet allows configuring a maximum number of request to handle by setting an environment variable named `MAX_REQUESTS`.