Drupal 7
Quickstart
# Initialize a drupal7 recipe using the latest Drupal 8 version
mkdir my-first-drupal7-app \
&& cd my-first-drupal7-app \
&& lando init \
--source remote \
--remote-url https://ftp.drupal.org/files/projects/drupal-7.71.tar.gz \
--remote-options="--strip-components 1" \
--recipe drupal7 \
--webroot . \
--name my-first-drupal7-app
# Start it up
lando start
# Install drupal
lando drush si --db-url=mysql://drupal7:drupal7@database/drupal7 -y
# List information about this app.
lando info
Default Configuration
recipe: drupal7
config:
php: '7.2'
composer_version: '2.0.7'
via: apache:2.4
webroot: .
database: mysql:5.7
drush: ^8
xdebug: false
Using Drush
By default, our Drupal 7 recipe will globally install the latest version of Drush 8 or the latest version of Drush 7 if you are using php 5.3. This means that you should be able to use lando drush
out of the box.
That said you can configure this recipe to use any version of Drush to which there is a resolvable package available via composer
. That means that the following are all valid.
Use the latest version of Drush
recipe: drupal7
config:
drush: "*"
Use the latest version of Drush 7
recipe: drupal7
config:
drush: ^7
Use a specific version of Drush 8
recipe: drupal7
config:
drush: 8.1.15
Using a site-local Drush
While Lando will globally install Drush for you it is increasingly common and in some cases a straight-up best practice to install a site-local Drush by requiring it in your projects composer.json
file.
Because of how Lando's php service sets up its PATH
this means that if you have indeed installed Drush on your own via composer
Lando will use yours over its own.
Said more explicitly: if you've required drush
via composer
in your application then this recipe will use your drush
and not the one you've specified in this recipes config.
If you are using a site-local Drush, it is also recommended to configure a build step to automatically install Drush before your app starts up. This can prevent weird version mismatches and other issues if you are using Drush in other Lando automation like events.
Automatically composer install before my app starts
recipe: drupal7
services:
appserver:
build:
- composer install
If you find that Lando is not using your drush
as expected, which can happen if you've modified composer
to install in a different directory than its normal vendor
you can take advantage of Lando's tooling overrides and specify an absolute path to your Drush.
tooling:
drush:
cmd: /path/to/my/drush
Default URL Setup
You may see http://default
show up in many drush
commands you run.
lando drush uli
// http://default/user/reset/1/1548025070/Px6PbLyJ_2laXqoDe6OukHXaX-cXExo4ErfrKbkqsE4/login
This happens because it is actually a difficult problem for Lando to 100% know the canonical URL or service that is serving your application. However, you can set up your environment so that commands like lando drush uli
return the proper URL.
Create or edit the relevant settings.php
file and add these lines. Note that you may need to specify a port depending on your Lando installation. You can run lando info
to see if your URLs use explicit ports or not.
$base_url = "http://mysite.lndo.site:PORT_IF_NEEDED"
Aliases
You can also use drush
aliases with a command like lando drush @sitealias cc all
by following the instructions below.
Make sure the alias file exists within the drush folder in your app. An example could be the files structure below:
|-- app
|-- drush
|-- yoursite.aliases.drushrc.php
For info on how to set up your alias, please refer to the following link or see this example.
Then configure the following build step in your Landofile and lando rebuild
.
services:
appserver:
build:
- mkdir -p ~/.drush/site-aliases
- ln -sf /app/drush/yoursite.aliases.drushrc.php ~/.drush/site-aliases/yoursite.drushrc.php
Configuring your root directory
If you are using a webroot besides .
, you will need to remember to cd
into that directory and run lando drush
from there. This is because many site-specific drush
commands will only run correctly if you run drush
from a directory that also contains a Drupal site.
If you are annoyed by having to cd
into that directory every time you run a drush
command, you can get around it by overriding the drush
tooling command in your Landofile so that Drush always runs from your webroot
.
Note that hard coding the root
like this may have unforeseen and bad consequences for some drush
commands such as drush scr
.
tooling:
drush:
service: appserver
cmd: drush --root=/app/PATH/TO/WEBROOT