LAMP server on Raspberry PI

4.9
(28)

Last Updated on 30th April 2022 by peppe8o

Raspberry PI boards can perform very well to provide complete web server functions with very small budgets. They also have very low power consumption, so many people can start a web page at affordable costs.

LAMP is a server composed of the following elements (each one composing the LAMP acronym):

  • Linux – Operating System – to manage hardware integration and general software operations
  • Apache – Web Server Application – to expose HTML pages
  • MySQL – Database – to store records and data which need to be managed with apposite structures
  • Php – Server-side Scripting – to create dynamic pages

Besides installing LAMP server to publish a website, you need to set also some networking configurations.

The very first thing to configure is to ensure that your Raspberry PI will acquire always the same IP address on every boot. This can be achieved by setting a static IP address on Raspberry PI and configuring your router to leave the same IP address associated with the RPI Mac Address (this part depends on your router model).

If you want to publish your web page on the internet, you also need to configure your router port-forwarding. You must forward external ports 80 (for HTTP) and/or 443 (for HTTPS) to Raspberry PI. You should also use a domain, being able to start with a free No-IP domain (please refer to configure No-IP DUC guide for the last part).

In this tutorial, I’m going to show you how to install a LAMP server in your Raspberry PI. I’m going to use a cheap Raspberry PI Zero W, but this guide will apply to all Raspberry PI boards.

What We Need

As usual, I suggest adding from now to your favourite e-commerce shopping cart all the needed hardware, so that at the end you will be able to evaluate overall costs and decide if to continue with the project or remove them from the shopping cart. So, hardware will be only:

Step-by-Step Procedure

Install Operating System – Linux

We’ll use a light OS without a desktop environment (headless), so we will have more power for services instead of wasting CPU and RAM on the not-needed desktop GUI. For this preparation part, please refer to install Raspberry PI OS Lite. If you want a Desktop environment to use your RPI as a Personal Computer together with web server services, then you can install Raspberry PI OS Desktop, proceeding with the next steps from the internal terminal.

Make your operating system up-to-date:

sudo apt update -y && sudo apt upgrade -y

Install Web Server – Apache

Apache is a fast HTTP server providing advanced functionalities to expose web pages. It is the most spread software used on the web to publish pages. It is available from all package repositories, so it makes its installation. From the terminal, issue the following command:

sudo apt install apache2 -y

Once installation is finished, you can check that Apache is working by using your web browser with a URL equal to “http://” followed by your Raspberry PI’s IP address. The following picture shows the expected result (192.168.1.18 is my RPI IP address):

raspberry-pi-apache-index

Install PHP

Also, Php is so spread that it is available from all package repositories. To proceed with its installation, use the following from the terminal:

sudo apt install php -y

To check if the installation finished correctly, you can issue the following command from the terminal (with the result):

pi@raspberrypi:~ $ php -v
PHP 8.2.7 (cli) (built: Jun  9 2023 19:37:27) (NTS)
Copyright (c) The PHP Group
Zend Engine v4.2.7, Copyright (c) Zend Technologies
    with Zend OPcache v8.2.7, Copyright (c), by Zend Technologies

You can also test PHP and get system info by creating a simple PHP page on your web server. From terminal, create test.php in /var/www/html/ folder with following command:

sudo nano /var/www/html/test.php

Add the following line:

<?php phpinfo(); ?>

Save and exit. Back to your browser, append “/test.php” to Raspberry PI’s IP address, getting the following result:

raspberry-pi-php-test

This is a useful page as it gives you fast access to your PHP configuration and variables.

Install Database – MariaDB instead of MySQL

From the database side, I suggest using MariaDB instead of MySQL. MariaDB is a fork of MySQL, resulting in lighter software (which better fits Raspberry PI resources) and keeping the same MySQL commands valid. We’ll install it together with the PHP connector so that MariaDB and PHP will be able to communicate. From terminal:

sudo apt install mariadb-server php-mysql -y

Once finished, a common best practice for a database is securing it. MariaDB gives you a procedure to set main configurations. From terminal:

sudo mysql_secure_installation

The following questions will be asked (followed by my suggested answers):

  • Enter current password for root (enter for none): > root password in fresh installation is empty, so simply press ENTER key or use your root password
  • Switch to unix_socket authentication [Y/n] > I answered no
  • Change the root password? [Y/n] > I suggest answering Y (yes)
  • New password: > type your new root password
  • Re-enter new password: > type again your new root password
  • Remove anonymous users? [Y/n] > I suggest answering Y (yes)
  • Disallow root login remotely? [Y/n] > I suggest answering Y (yes)
  • Remove test database and access to it? [Y/n] > I suggest answering Y (yes)
  • Reload privilege tables now? [Y/n] > Answer yes to make your answers effective

Your LAMP server is now ready!

Simplify Database management – Phpmyadmin

A useful tool to manage databases in LAMP servers is phpMyAdmin. It can be installed with the following terminal command:

sudo apt install phpmyadmin -y

In phpMyAdmin setup screens I suggest the following:

  • select apache (mandatory) with space and press Ok
  • select Yes to configure database for phpmyadmin with dbconfig-common
  • insert your favourite phpMyAdmin password and press Ok
  • insert again your phpMyAdmin password to confirm and press Ok

Grant phpMyAdmin user DB privileges to manage DBs

We’ll connect to MariaDB with the root user (default password is one before set) to grant permissions (remember to use semicolumns at the end of each command row as shown below):

sudo mysql -uroot -p
grant all privileges on *.* to 'phpmyadmin'@'localhost';
flush privileges;
quit

From here, use your web browser to reach phpMyAdmin login page by using Raspberry PI’s IP address followed by “/phpmyadmin/”:

raspberry-pi-phpmyadmin-login

Use “phpmyadmin” as username and the password you set during phpMyAdmin installation. You will reach the phpMyAdmin home page:

raspberry-pi-phpmyadmin-homepage

Next Steps

You can now need to secure your web server. If you don’t need an external Certification Authority, you can use Self Signed Certificate tutorial.

If you want to discover many other projects for your Raspberry PI, you can take a look at peppe8o Raspberry PI tutorials.

Enjoy!

How useful was this post?

Click on a star to rate it anonymously!

Average rating 4.9 / 5. Vote count: 28

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.

We are sorry that this post was not useful for you!

Let us improve this post!

Tell us how we can improve this post?