40

I am new to PHP and want to know the directory structure for the php projects. I have experience in Java and in java we have src contains java source files, WEB-INF contains lib, and jsp pages. Do we have any similar standard directory structure in PHP? Also do we have layering in php like we have layers in java (e.g. Web, Service, DAO layers)

I browsed few links. But every one giving different answers.

Not sure if we can compare the two languages. I just want to stick to some standards.

Thanks in advance.

1

5 Answers 5

36

Nope. PHP is what you make of it. It can be very simple flat files, or however you want it.

That being said, there are a few agreed upon coding standards, but there is no "enforcement" of said standards. They are called PSR (PHP Standards Recommendation). There is a background on it here: http://net.tutsplus.com/tutorials/php/psr-huh/
You can view the standards one by one here: http://www.php-fig.org/psr/

Most major frameworks follow these standards, and if you are going to use one, it may be easier to go with the flow.

Again, every framework, project, plugin, program, etc, have different layouts with different project structures. A common structure is something like this:

-framework_dir
-public_html
    -js
    -img
    -css
    -index.php
    -protected/private
        -controllers
        -models
        -views
        -etc

They then use the .htaccess file to block access to the protected directories. Again, this is just the common representation I have seen in several frameworks. If you are doing a personal project, just use something that is comfortable to you. Every framework is going to give you a different library or way to access the data. There are no "layers", but again every framework has objects that handle different areas (email, database, cache, http, logs, etc). Because there are dozens of popular ones, it is just up to you to find what fits with your philosophy or project. Watch a few of the 5 minute blog videos, see what jives, and then give it a test run for a couple days. If you don't like it, switch to another.

1
  • Thanks for your help. I did the way you suggested. I have one database properties file which I want to read from php code and want to restrict the user to access through browser. Can you give me sample .htaccess file where I can make changes. I tried but it is giving me internal server error.
    – javafan
    Nov 3, 2013 at 19:28
23

With the invention of Composer, people now have a central place to register their projects for the world to consume, and other people now can look at that code base and see similarities.

The result is this: https://github.com/php-pds/skeleton

In short:

If a package has a root-level directory for then it MUST be named
command-line executables bin/
configuration files config/
documentation files docs/
web server files public/
other resource files resources/
PHP source code src/
test code tests/

This standard does not make any further recommendations about which directories have to exist below src or public.

The task to organize your PHP source files inside any of these directories is still up to you, but there are suggestions outlined in this article that I'd agree on: Either sort by type (controller, entity, service), or sort by feature (user, login, cart, catalog, article, comment) - the latter keeping all the code that belongs to one feature in on directory (or few sub directories), which often seems to be the better file organisation.

When organizing by type, you'll find yourself jumping between directories quite often, and also you do not get a good overview about what the code is about - you'd always have "Controller", but you rarely have "StampCollection".

10

I tend to use a Feature-based folder structure for my backend projects. Every feature-folder has his own controller, manager and routes file. This works well for api-backends. It looks in a way like https://blog.nikolaposa.in.rs/2017/01/16/on-structuring-php-projects/

For example, we have a Customer feature with a CustomerController, CustomerRepository, CustomerRoutes,..

My folder structure looks like this:

- build/
-- phpdox.xml
-- phpmd.xml
-- phpunit.dist.xml
- config/
- public/
-- .htaccess
-- index.php
-- assets/
- src/
-- Customer/
--- CustomerController.php
--- CustomerRepository.php
--- Customer.php
--- customer.routes.php
- tests/
- vendor/
composer.json
.gitignore
4

Unfortunately (or not?) you're very free with PHP. It's up to you.

Here's my structure:

framework/
controllers/             
models/
configs/
files/
templates/
themes/
tmp/
index.php
init.php
.htaccess

You can control the access via .htaccess.

6
  • What about the CI scripts? Jan 28, 2015 at 13:35
  • @NBhargav what CI scripts do you mean?
    – Mr. B.
    Jan 28, 2015 at 16:11
  • If I want to use Continous Integration with the PHP project, how do you maintain the CI scripts folder. Where and how do you keep it? Jan 29, 2015 at 3:29
  • @NBhargav What are "CI scripts"? Do you mean "travis CI"?
    – Mr. B.
    Jan 29, 2015 at 16:54
  • 2
    @BhargavNanekalva This answer above is having an index.php at the root directory, indicating that the whole directory tree is exposed to external (possibly affected by the contents of .htaccess at the same level). I would try to avoid that because without the help of server config, it's harder (but not impossible) to hide stuff that you don't want exposed.
    – Sven
    Aug 16, 2021 at 15:44
3

For a library, I am using the following structure... plus i've included recommendations I'm not using (yet)

PROJECT ROOT
|--composer.json
|--README.md
|--docs //for documentation files
|--tests //for Unit Tests
|--vendor //for external libraries (if everything isn't included through composer)
|--examples //examples of the library being used
|--config //any configuration files you may have
|--src  //where the library's actual code "lives"
   |--php //php source code, classes, any other scripts
   |--View //html views, but actually php files that output html
   |--Style //contains .css files
   |--Script //contains .js files
   |--Res   //contains other deliverable resource files. Could be mp3 files, json etc

Currently, I'm only using composer.json,README.md, and src among the root files. But I will probably use the others as I've described, when i get to that point.

By no means do I think this is "correct". And this setup only works because I have a php router on every request. With a .htaccess, you could route a .css file to /src/Style/requested_file.css.

I wanted the project root to be cleaned up, and I have achieved that. PHP Fig does not have a PSR for directory structures... that I'm aware of. I had hoped PSR-4, autoloader would have had some standards, but... not really, in regard to directory structure.

You could look at laravel, wordpress, PHP Mailer and other php libraries to see examples and see what you might like best

1
  • Pretty much in line with the github.com/php-pds/skeleton approach mentioned above. One could argue that "examples" belong into "docs". It's missing a dedicated "public" folder (which is by name communicating that the contents are public), which may be a better approach when dealing with images, css and js files, i.e. have "public/Script" instead of "src/Script". Reason being that it is easier to restrict access to the PHP source code that way inside "src/php" from external access.
    – Sven
    Aug 16, 2021 at 15:49

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.