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I'm having a PHP based web application running on Apache server which has considerable amount of php processing in back end. Since the overall performance is low I worked on improving the performance of the application. First I followed techniques such as client side caching, gzip enabling, js-css minifying which improved the performance upto a good extend.

In order to further improve the performance I wanted to try out server level improvement. So I tried to compare the application performance by hosting it on Apache and Nginx servers.

  • Nginx version - 1.0.15;
  • Apache version - 2.2.15;
  • php version - 5.4.38;

In Apache I user Apache + mod-php and in Nginx I used Nginx + php-fpm for this comparison. As most of the tutorials explained I configured the number of Nginx workers equal to the number of cores in my processor. I used jmeter to do the stress testing and following are the graphs I could generate out of it.

In all these graphs x-axis is each request I sent and y-axis is milliseconds for getting response for each request.

Access the login page

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Submit the login page

enter image description here

Access home page

enter image description here

I could only perform the testing upto 100 concurrent users logged in within 1 second because it started dropping requests after then in both server setups.

There was a little improvement on performance in Nginx than Apache but it was not a major difference where it's worth to change all my server architecture from Apache to Nginx. And when I observe the server resource utilization also I didn't find much of difference between Nginx and Apache

When I went through other comparisons people have done, I found that they claim Nginx is much more faster in concurrent accesses such as following graph shows.

http://www.eschrade.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/event-mpm-nginx.gif

But I was unable to observe any major difference of performance in Nginx over Apache even with 100 concurrent access within 1 second.

Following are my questions.

  1. Is Nginx + php-fpm is suppose to do server operations much faster than Apache + mod-php due to efficient usage of memory and other resources ?
  2. Is Nginx only recommended to server static contend and not for heavy server operation sites ?
  3. Is there any better way of configuring Nginx to gain more performance improvement ?
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    1. It's likely to be the opposite actually, since there is no inter-process communication. Apart of that - why should php itself run faster? It's the same engine of the same version.
    – zerkms
    Apr 2, 2015 at 2:24
  • 3
    2. How php-fpm is relevant to serving static content?
    – zerkms
    Apr 2, 2015 at 2:27
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    I'm upvoting this question because it's well-written and presented. I'm voting to close it however, because (1) and (2) are mostly opinion-based, and the configuration/performance optimization question (3) is a bit too broad for useful answers.
    – mario
    Apr 2, 2015 at 2:40
  • @zerkms Yes it's same php version but php-fpm suppose to be much faster because it's using FastCGI Process mechanism which uses less memory. That's what I could find in internet. quora.com/… blog.a2o.si/2009/06/24/apache-mod_php-compared-to-nginx-php-fpm
    – Thilanka
    Apr 2, 2015 at 5:13
  • "but php-fpm suppose to be much faster because it's using FastCGI " --- fastcgi is just a SAPI, it does not make php itself faster or slower. But presence of fastcgi makes request transfer slower - since you need to connect and transfer a request, whereas with mod_php it's in the same process memory space.
    – zerkms
    Apr 2, 2015 at 5:23

6 Answers 6

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I did a bit more research on this and found that Nginx will perform well with static resources and not with other dynamic content delivery such as php processing which needs to done with the help of external application such as php-fpm. So if your web application has a performance bottleneck on php processing then replacing Apache with Nginx will not be a solution.

Following article explains a details research done on comparing static contend delivery and php script result delivery using Apache + mod_php and Nginx + php-fpm.

http://blog.a2o.si/2009/06/24/apache-mod_php-compared-to-nginx-php-fpm/

Following are the conclusion points described in the above article.

Conclusion or “should you switch from Apache to Nginx?”

  • Short answer: I do not know.
  • Longer answers are here:

    1. If you host many websites and users utilize .htaccess files and change them frequently, then the answer is probably “no”. The cost of switching over to Nginx and converting all the configuration to new format usually reaches the cost of buying another server.
    2. If you have single application on multiple servers and most of the processing power is not consumed by serving static file content, the answer is also probably “no”.
    3. If you are mainly serving static content, the answer is obviously “yes”.
    4. If you are creating a fresh system for webhosting solution, the answer is probably “yes”, with the assumption that users will not miss the .htaccess functionality or it will be provided by other means
    5. If you are consolidating services with some virtualization technology, then answer is probably “yes”, as Nginx tends to have smaller memory footprint than Apache.
    6. If you are looking towards Nginx as your PHP server optimization, look again, but not at Nginx, at your application code.
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    Following up on this years-old (but well explained) opinion, these days PHP-FPM processing is quite good when paired with Nginx and FastCGI caching, esp. now with OPcache, and the brand new OPcache file cache, which do wonders for scaling PHP-based sites. And using .htaccess files is a major security risk, plus it allows users to "hack" config you might not want them to. Besides for low-end shared hosting, Nginx is nearly always a better choice. Sep 4, 2021 at 18:58
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Despite there being a lot of claims that it's faster, or supposed to be, no, it's not supposed to be faster, at least not unconditionally.

Exactly which is faster, mod_php or ext-fpm, hasn't been proven and it's likely to vary. In respect to performance you have three considerations, theory, implementation, use case, resources and load.

In theory, mod_php is the fastest achievable. With mod_php the web server and interpreter directly communicate, they share the same resources and memory space. With ext-fpm you have separate processes that communicate not as directly and that must duplicate resources.

Traditionally separate processes are popular because they tend to have greater flexibility in respect to things such as running as many different users, different versions concurrently, etc. Many people also use multiple process systems as they can't be bothered to free(), fclose(), etc.

While ext-fpm, using FastCGI, is an attempt to make the separate process model meet its maximum theoretical speed, the maximum theoretical speed is still slower than the maximum theoretical speed of unified processes.

Finding out which is fastest can be difficult. Other people's tests wont be reliable even if well orchestrated as they may not be relevant to your use case and your setup. In your own tests you may make one faster than the other but it doesn't mean someone can't come along and change that. That someone could be you with more time and understanding at your disposal.

The implementation of mod_php isn't necessarily one that brings it to its maximum theoretical speed. The two might not be as far apart as people might expect especially as quite often the SAPI overhead can turn out to be trivial in comparison to everything else that goes on when serving a static request. Many benchmarks are having to test with virtually noop scripts so that the difference appears significant.

It has become a popular belief that ext-fpm "is fast". There are many forces which persist this, some of which are innocent, others draw from incompetence and some are down right manipulative.

  1. Apache httpd doesn't want to recommend using mod_php doesn't work with threaded MPMs for various reasons. Apache httpd with threaded or event driven models which can have some performance impact requests that aren't serving PHP. While PHP has made significant progress towards supporting both threaded and event driven models, it's still a long way off for event driven and it's threaded support haven't been quite as battle tested as it's traditional per process support. Many people are confused by this. It's not something that makes PHP faster. It's a trade off. Potentially slow down PHP, speed up static content. Apache has started recommending against mod_php entirely which is likely to confuse a lot of people as well as the likely origin of the mistaken believe that ext-fpm "is faster".
  2. Spurned by things such as the Apache recommendation, many people have tried ext-fpm and then used their platforms such as speeches at conferences or blogs to report their anecdotal "successes" which then propagates the phenomena to a wider impressionable audience.
  3. Sometimes when results are better switching to ext-fpm, the reasons often aren't what people expect. Many people when switching from mod_php to ext-fpm are doing more than that or other factors are at play.
  4. In technology the word fast is particularly problematic. It often doesn't really mean anything. The last several systems I've used which have been branded as fast (very popular technologies) have turned out to be the opposite. Many people mistake fast for meaning fastest. In reality it tends not to mean much. Fast in terms of perception? A harddrive spinning at 100RPM will appear to be spinning "fast" to most people. A harddrive spinning at 1000RPM will appear to be spinning "fast" to most people. Fastest tends not to mean much.
  5. Conflicts of interest. nginx has a commercial venture and it remains to be seen if that might be a source of some marketing for ext-fpm. It serves nginx for people to believe that it's faster than mod_php which is only available for a competing webserver. There is however a thread party module available for nginx and PHP so it doesn't seem like it would be a likely source lobbying for ext-fpm. The top result in Google however is from a marketing blog trying to bring in traffic to commercial hosting services that skips most of the pertinent details so there are parties clearly milking it.

Often when people see a different result they fail to appreciate why. The intimate details of their process, measurements and traffic are left out. People then often attempt to repeat these successes and fail leaving endless search results of people asking why it's not faster. The big one is people finding success when using a multiple-process based MPM with mod_php while having a static content heavy load. These cases can be especially deceptive as the load from static requests can bounce back onto PHP.

Another common mistake is for people to also test two different configurations. The configuration for php-fpm might be more optimised than that for mod_php. Sometimes it can be as simple as people optimising everything about the one they expect to be faster while neglecting the original. This is especially relevant where people might do things such as not check whether requests were successful while also changing things such as the memory limit or maximum execution time. A lot of things can change in the configuration when people are only meant to change the SAPI, sometimes even unavoidably, sometimes even transparently. A common example might be that the limits on the webserver might be insufficient to maximise utilisation of the server's resources where as ext-fpm will be able to spawn additional processes to take advantage of additional cores. It's common to see people move things such as routing over from PHP to the webserver for FPM.

Compared to mod_php with a multiple-process-single-threaded MPM, ext-fpm is a good contender with a lot of all round benefits though greater performance isn't strictly guaranteed. Though if your load is entirely serving PHP requests then Apache is already more of less doing what ext-fpm would otherwise be doing.

There's also a discrepancy between things such as latency versus throughput and cycles versus bytes versus waits.

In theory, the way forward is php-zts with either ngx_php or mod_php. The big caveat is that php-zts hasn't gotten nearly the uptake nor care and attention as php-nts such that it introduces overhead to PHP execution itself which makes it very hard to compete with php-fpm at present. The implementation does not bring it into the realm of reaching its optimum. In some cases suboptimum might be an understatement. Many people are concerned about the reliability of threaded PHP which may or may not impact you. It certainly wont be as much of a concern if you're only serving dynamic content and not running a shared hosting service. This appear to potentially be a fear campaign orchestrated by Apache. There should be enough people using php-zts for platforms where it's the only option for it to be relatively stable.

There are other options though they may be more hands on. It's even possible to open a unix socket yourself, parse the FCGI and handle it asynchronously with things such as select. The caveat of event driven in PHP is that most of the major high level IO libraries such as MySQL don't support it in a unified fashion.

php-swoole is starting to look promising though it's early days yet. The situation with php-fpm, mod_php and php-zts is a mess.

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    This answer is very detailed, but a bit misleading since much of your info is comparing mod_php for Apache vs. ext-fpm for Apache, when the OP's (outdated) question is about Apache/mod_php vs. Nginx/PHP-FPM. The TLDR here is that PHP-FPM is more popular for Apache these days because it's more reliable, and for Nginx it's really the only PHP processor available. The good thing is that PHP-FPM as a project is much better maintained now than in years past and it is now popular with both Apache and Nginx, meaning a bit more commonality between them. Sep 4, 2021 at 19:11
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I have a website running with load balancing of 3 servers. 2 of them are running on nginx with PHP-FPM (new ones). However the main server is on Apache + PHP FastCGI hittng roughly 40% traffic. Recently I thought of changing Apache also to nginx; so I installed nginx on the same server for a different IP and did some tests. But surprisingly, Apache could generate the page in 10-20 milliseconds on each hit but nginx takes 60-70 milliseconds. nginx is faster for static files, but if you have a CDN there is no need to worry about static content. Apache is a great server. But try FastCGI and not the PHP module.

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Actually I tried Nginx + PHP+fpm and the performance has decreased a little bit. So I'll go back to Apache+PHP-fpm and let the Nginx do the balancer for the Apaches. I also use the Nginx to serve static content like images etc. It's a very good combination: Apache+PHP-fmp, Nginx as loadbalancer and static content server!

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Apache uses the traditional file-based methods to handle static content. This traditional method is slightly old-fashioned and that is why it has slightly low performance if you consider today’s high standard of dealing with static content. On the other hand, Apache web servers give more important to dynamic content and it processes them by an embedded processor. The dynamic contents are executed with the web server and there is no need for external components.

It is this ability to handle dynamic content internally that makes Apache the best performing web servers for web applications having more dynamic content. Coming to Nginx, Nginx lacks the ability to handle dynamic content internally. It uses an external processor for such execution and there is going to be a waiting period for sending requests to external processors and getting responses which slow down the performance significantly. Configuring the communication between Nginx and external processor can also get complicated at times especially when there are too many web traffics on the application. It is somewhat a benefit in disguise. This enables Nginx to handle static content at a faster rate internally.

Conclusion: Since most part of a website is having static content and most of the media files are actually static content of a web application, people always find Nginx providing higher speed than Apache. That is why over the years, so many website owners have switched from Apache + PHP-FPM to Nginx + PHP-FPM and got better performance while handling huge traffic. But if you have a website where there is more dynamic content and PHP has to do most of the work rather than web server having to do more work as is the case with the static content website, Apache will always deliver a faster performance.

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Much faster - no.

It's about 10% faster (this is what my tests show), but it's a lot better under high load.

Since I couldn't find any good performance tests I've decided to conduct my own.

I've tested with PHP 8.2 Apache with mod_php vs Nginx with php-fpm

In my tests I found out that under high load Apache with mod_php performs a lot worse compared to Nginx with php-fpm.

I wrote an article about this with charts and more info - mod_php vs php-fpm.

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