/platformsh-example-drupal8

Drupal 8 example configuration for Platform.sh. Maintained by the Platform.sh team.

Primary LanguagePHPGNU General Public License v2.0GPL-2.0

Drupal project template for Platform.sh

This project provides a starter kit for Drupal 8 projects hosted on Platform.sh. It is very closely based on the Drupal Composer project.

Starting a new project

To start a new Drupal 8 project on Platform.sh, you have 2 options:

  1. Create a new project through the Platform.sh user interface and select "start new project from a template". Then select Drupal 8 as the template. That will create a new project using this repository as a starting point.

  2. Take an existing project, add the necessary Platform.sh files, and push it to a Platform.sh Git repository. This template includes examples of how to set up a Drupal 8 site. (See the "differences" section below.)

Using as a reference

You can also use this repository as a reference for your own Drupal projects, and borrow whatever code is needed. The most important parts are the .platform.app.yaml file, the .platform directory, and the changes made to settings.php.

Managing a Drupal site built with Composer

Once the site is installed, there is no difference between a site hosted on Platform.sh and a site hosted anywhere else. It's just Composer. See the Drupal documentation for tips on how best to leverage Composer with Drupal 8.

How does this starter kit differ from vanilla Drupal from Drupal.org?

  1. The vendor directory (where non-Drupal code lives) and the config directory (used for syncing configuration from development to production) are outside the web root. This is a bit more secure as those files are now not web-accessible.

  2. The settings.php and settings.platformsh.php files are provided by default. The settings.platformsh.php file automatically sets up the database connection on Platform.sh, and allows controlling Drupal configuration from environment variables.

  3. We include recommended .platform.app.yaml and .platform files that should suffice for most use cases. You are free to tweak them as needed for your particular site.