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I'm trying laravel as a PHP framework, I have already extracted the laravel zip into ~/opt/xampp/htdocs/laravel but when I go to localhost/laravel or localhost/laravel I get a 403 error message saying:

Access forbidden!

You don't have permission to access the requested object. It is either read-protected or not readable by the server.

I read somewhere that I need to edit the storage folder inside of laravel so it can be readable and writable so I chmod -R 766 laravel/storage but still no luck, I'm doing this from Ubuntu 12.04 have anyone encountered this ?

EDIT
I have chmod -R 0+w laravel/storage and now when i go to localhost/laravel i get an index of some files in there, but when i go to localhost/laravel/public/ still get the 403 error, instead of the expected result

EDIT 2
I have set chmod -R 765 laravel/public and now when i get to localhost/laravel/public i get this message which leads me to believe i'm getting closer:

Warning: require(/opt/lampp/htdocs/learning-laravel/laravel/laravel.php): failed to open stream: Permission denied in /opt/lampp/htdocs/learning-laravel/public/index.php on line 34

Fatal error: require(): Failed opening required '/opt/lampp/htdocs/learning-laravel/laravel/laravel.php' (include_path='.:/opt/lampp/lib/php') in /opt/lampp/htdocs/learning-laravel/public/index.php on line 34

2
  • Have you tried giving appropriate rights to ~/opt/xampp/htdocs/laravel? Aug 16, 2012 at 6:19
  • @OzairKafray yeah, still no luck Aug 16, 2012 at 6:22

6 Answers 6

68

Final Update
I finally solved it, what happened was that the laravel folder was read protected, what i had to do was to set chmod 755 -R laravel and then chmod -R o+w storage and voila i had laravel up and running, thanks to everybody that contributed.

2
  • 3
    Just for the right syntax: You need to write chmod -R 755 laravel ;-)
    – n2o
    Mar 2, 2014 at 11:37
  • I would rather use the solution from @Sirlate because by your solution you are basically doing chmod 757 -R storage which means that anybody can read and write to the storage folder where are sessions, logs.. also written. So basically I see it as security risk. So even your sister can read that folder if she has guest account on your computer. Dec 8, 2014 at 22:57
17

for just getting start with laravel, I just do these following steps:

sudo chmod -R 770 /your/path/to/laravel/folder/

then add www-data group to your laravel

sudo chgrp -R www-data /your/path/to/laravel/folder/
1
  • 1
    Thanks, this made deploying from Github/Bitbucket a whole lot smoother.
    – PaulELI
    Jun 11, 2015 at 0:58
5

Your on the right track, after install of laravel you need to ensure the storage directory has the correct permissions:

sudo chmod o+w storage 

Then make sure you are serving your public folder and not your laravel folder in apaches document root

<VirtualHost *:80>
    DocumentRoot /Users/JonSnow/Sites/MySite/public
    ServerName mysite.dev
</VirtualHost>

Both requirements are covered here

3
  • do i really need to add the virtualhost into my apache configuration ? Aug 16, 2012 at 6:46
  • 2
    @IsaacGonzalez -you don't need to add a virtual host no. From the looks of it, it seems as if your permissions are all jacked up. Trash what you've done so far, download laravel again, extract to ~/opt/xampp/htdocs/laravel then run one permissions change to the storage directory
    – cborgia
    Aug 16, 2012 at 6:53
  • 2
    I found it necessary to change permissions recursively on the storage directory. Ex: sudo chmod -R o+w storage
    – Ryre
    Aug 26, 2013 at 21:09
0

On the Laravel forum, Kaspien gave this usefull answers:

You do have to chmod 777, but only on the storage/views folder to use blade, which happens to be the view engine the default Laravel view uses. I usually chmod 777 all storage/* directories on a fresh install of Laravel before I start a project, since they have to be writable for views, sessions, etc.

From the thread: http://forums.laravel.com/viewtopic.php?id=1552

-1

In your .htaccess file:

RewriteRule ^index.php(.*)$ /public/index.php [L]
1
  • 2
    This assumes that /laravel/laravel.php is actually readable. This won't solve the OP's problem. Aug 16, 2012 at 18:24
-3

Change permission to the storage and bootstrap folders like so

sudo chmod -R 777 ./storage ./bootstrap
1
  • never set a directory to 777!
    – loic.lopez
    Apr 15, 2019 at 14:35

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