What is a PHP framework and which one should I learn and use?



Framework is a tool to help you develop applications faster and better. It is a reusable set of libraries and/or classes. They usually define default folder structure of a project.
There are many existing, well established and secure open source frameworks with large communities behind them. Rather than reinventing the wheel many developers use them to built web applications. There is NO best and NO official PHP framework, because different purposes and different projects require different tools and approaches.

Using established existing open source framework is strongly advised when working in a team. Framework can provide developers same set of standards and better interoperability when they build application together.

Which framework should you learn?

Before diving into a PHP framework get yourself familiar with some advanced concepts such as OOP, design patterns, ORM, authentication, MVC (model view controller) etc. For bigger projects usage of popular open source frameworks instead of your custom one or procedural programming is advised.
Before understanding modern open source PHP frameworks check also Composer - a dependency Manager for PHP.
In your career path you will not need to know all of them but you should learn how to use few of the frameworks that are widely used in the industry or are important to you. Organizations and companies are always moving towards modern popular established frameworks so for predicting which framework will get you a job in PHP market today is a task for a prophet or a fortune teller - therefore it is almost impossible. You can check the popularity trends in PHP community and check the most popular ones (according to the stars on GitHub) but don’t get fooled by such comparison charts. Each organization can move towards something else sooner or later.
Learning some complex PHP frameworks can have a steep learning curve.
According to the architecture the framework itself is built upon there are three major types of frameworks we will use to categorize them in this FAQ:

Component frameworks

Component frameworks are built and decoupled into separate components that you can use in your application independently on other components. You can just use some components or all of them. Most of component frameworks can be also a full stack framework (described in the next section) at the same time.

Full stack frameworks

Full stack framework includes everything you need to develop an application in one package. Decoupling of components is mostly not possible.

Micro-frameworks

Micro-framework holds simple core with very lightweight infrastructure of classes and libraries. Main purpose of micro-frameworks is fast building of application and still keep lightning speed of performance with small footprint.

Miscellaneous

  • API Platform - API-first web framework on top of Symfony with JSON-LD, Schema.org and Hydra support.
  • Medoo - PHP Database Framework
  • Zend Expressive - Minimalist PSR-7 middleware framework for PHP.
All the popular and the ones we have encountered in this group are listed above in alphabetical order.

How to Secure PHP Web Applications and Prevent Attacks?


As a developer you must know how to build a secure and bulletproof application. Your duty is to prevent security attacks and secure your application.

Checklist of PHP and Web Security Issues

Make sure you have these items sorted out when deploying your application into production environment:
  1. Cross Site Scripting (XSS)
  2. Injections
  3. Cross Site Request Forgery (XSRF/CSRF)
  4. Public Files
  5. Passwords
  6. Uploading Files
  7. Session Hijacking
  8. Remote File Inclusion
  9. PHP Configuration
  10. Use HTTPS
  11. Things Not Listed

Cross Site Scripting (XSS)

XSS attack happens where client side code (usually JavaScript) gets injected into the output of your PHP script.
// GET data is sent through URL: http://example.com/search.php?search=<script>alert('test')</script>
$search = $_GET['search'] ?? null;
echo 'Search results for '.$search;

// This can be solved with htmlspecialchars
$search = htmlspecialchars($search, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8');
echo 'Search results for '.$search;
  • ENT_QUOTES is used to escape single and double quotes beside HTML entities
  • UTF-8 is used for pre PHP 5.4 environments (now it is default). In some browsers some characters might get pass the htmlspecialchars().

Injections

SQL Injection

When accessing databases from your application, SQL injection attack can happen by injecting malicious SQL parts into your existing SQL statement.

Directory Traversal (Path Injection)

Directory traversal attack is also known as ../ (dot, dot, slash) attack. It happens where user supplies input file names and can traverse to parent directory. Data can be set as index.php?page=../secret or /var/www/secret or something more catastrophic:
$page = $_GET['page'] ?? 'home';

require $page;
// or something like this
echo file_get_contents('../pages/'.$page.'.php');
In such cases you must check if there are attempts to access parent or some remote folder:
// Checking if the string contains parent directory
if (strstr($_GET['page'], '../') !== false) {
    throw new \Exception("Directory traversal attempt!");
}

// Checking remote file inclusions
if (strstr($_GET['page'], 'file://') !== false) {
    throw new \Exception("Remote file inclusion attempt!");
}

// Using whitelists of pages that are allowed to be included in the first place
$allowed = ['home', 'blog', 'gallery', 'catalog'];
$page = (in_array($page, $allowed)) ? $page : 'home';
echo file_get_contents('../pages/'.$page.'.php');

Command Injection

Be careful when dealing with commands executing functions and data you don’t trust.
exec('rm -rf '.$GET['path']);

Code Injection

Code injection happens when malicious code can be injected in eval() function, so sanitize your data when using it:
eval('include '.$_GET['path']);

Cross Site Request Forgery (XSRF/CSRF)

Cross site request forgery or one click attack or session riding is an exploit where user executes unwanted actions on web applications.

Public Files

Make sure to move all your application files, configuration files and similar parts of your web application in a folder that is not publicly accessible when you visit URL of web application. Some file types (for example, .yml files) might not be processed by your web server and user can view them online.
Example of good folder structure:
app/
  config/
    parameters.yml
  src/
public/
  index.php
  style.css
  javascript.js
  logo.png
Configure web server to serve files from public folder instead of your application root folder. Public folder contains the front controller (index.php). In case web server gets misconfigured and fails to serve PHP files properly only source code of index.php will be visible to public.

Passwords

When working with user’s passwords hash them properly with password_hash() function.

Uploading Files

A lot of security breaches happen where users can upload a file on server. Make sure you go through all the vulnerabilities of uploading files such as renaming uploaded file, moving it to publicly unaccessible folder, checking file type and similar. Since there are a lot of issues to check here, more information is located in the separate FAQ:

Session Hijacking

Session hijacking is an attack where attacker steals session ID of a user. Session ID is sent to server where $_SESSION array gets populated based on it. Session hijacking is possible through an XSS attack or if someone gains access to folder on server where session data is stored.

Remote File Inclusion

Remote file inclusion attack (RFI) means that attacker can include custom scripts:
$page = $_GET['page'] ?? 'home'

require $page . '.php';
In above code $_GET can be set to a remote file http://yourdomain.tld/index.php?page=http://example.com/evilscript
Make sure you disable this in your php.ini unless you know what you’re doing:
; Disable including remote files
allow_url_fopen = off
; Disable opening remote files for include(), require() and include_once() functions.
; If above allow_url_fopen is disabled, allow_url_include is also disabled.
allow_url_include = off

PHP Configuration

Always keep installed PHP version updated. You can use versionscan to check for possible vulnerabilities of your PHP version. Update open source libraries and applications and maintain web server.
Here are some of the important settings from php.ini that you should check out. You can also use iniscan to scan your php.ini files for best security practices.

Error Reporting

In your production environment you must always turn off displaying errors to screen. If errors occur in your application and they are visible to the outside world, attacker can get valuable data for attacking your application. display_errors and log_errors directives in php.ini file:
; Disable displaying errors to screen
display_errors = off
; Enable writing errors to server logs
log_errors = on

Exposing PHP Version

PHP version is visible in HTML headers. You might want to consider hiding PHP version by turning off expose_php directive and prevent web server to send back header X-Powered-By:
expose_php = off

Remote Files

In most cases it is important to disable access to remote files:
; disabled opening remote files for fopen, fsockopen, file_get_contents and similar functions
allow_url_fopen =  0
; disabled including remote files for require, include ans similar functions
allow_url_include = 0

open_basedir

This settings defines one or more directories (subdirectories included) where PHP has access to read and write files. This includes file handling (fopen, file_get_contents) and also including files (include, require):
open_basedir = "/var/www/test/uploads"

Session Settings

  • session.use_cookies and session.use_only_cookies
    PHP is by default configured to store session data on the server and a tracking cookie on client side (usually called PHPSESSID) with unique ID for the session.
; in most cases you'll want to enable cookies for storing session
session.use_cookies = 1
; disabled changing session id through PHPSESSID parameter (e.g foo.php?PHPSESSID=<session id>)
session.use_only_cookies = 1
session.use_trans_sid = 0
; rejects any session ID from user that doesn't match current one and creates new one
session.use_strict_mode = 0
  • session.cookie_httponly
    If the attacker somehow manages to inject Javascript code for stealing user’s current cookies (the document.cookie string), the HttpOnly cookie you’ve set won’t show up in the list.
session.cookie_httponly = 1
  • session.cookie_domain
    This sets the domain for which cookies apply. For wildcard domains you can use .example.com or set this to the domain it should be applied. By default it is not enabled, so it is highly recommended for you to enable it:
session.cookie_domain = example.com
  • session.cookie_secure
    For HTTPS sites this accepts only cookies sent over HTTPS. If you’re still not using HTTPS, you should consider it.
session.cookie_secure = 1

Use HTTPS

HTTPS is a protocol for secure communication over network. It is highly recommended that you enable it on all sites. Read more about HTTPS in the dedicated FAQ: How to Install SSL Certificate and Enable HTTPS.

What is Next?

Above we’ve introduced many security issues. Security, attacks and vulnerabilities are continuously evolving. Take time and check some good resources to learn more about security and turn this check list into a habit:

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