Remote debugging via SSH tunnel
This tutorial describes how to use an SSH tunnel to set up a secure connection between the development machine and a remote server. This can be useful for debugging code on a remote machine when there are firewalls in between, or a NAT router prevents direct connection, or the ISP or network infrastructure does not allow incoming TCP connections to the developer machine.
Prepare the debugging engine
Before you start debugging, make sure that you have a debugging engine installed and configured properly. PhpStorm supports debugging with two most popular tools: Xdebug and Zend Debugger. These tools cannot be used simultaneously because they block each other. To avoid this problem, you need to update the corresponding sections in the php.ini file as described in Configure Xdebug and Configure Zend Debugger.
Open the active php.ini file in the editor:
In the Settings dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S) , click PHP.
On the PHP page that opens, click next to the CLI Interpreter field.
In the CLI Interpreters dialog that opens, the Configuration file read-only field shows the path to the active php.ini file. Click Open in Editor.
When using Xdebug, make sure at least the following settings are specified:
Listening for incoming debugger connections
In PhpStorm, enable listening to incoming debug connections by either clicking ( in the classic UI) on the toolbar/the status bar or selecting Debug tool window automatically. Before launching the script, make sure that either a breakpoint is set or the Break at first line in PHP scripts option is enabled on the Debug page of the Settings dialog Ctrl+Alt+S.
in the main menu. This will ensure PhpStorm reacts when a debugging session is started and opens theSet up an SSH tunnel to the remote machine
What we want to do is connect to the remote machine over SSH and set up port forwarding for port 9000 (for Xdebug 2), 9003 (for Xdebug 3), or 10137 (Zend Debugger). The idea is to create a "virtual" TCP port on the remote server that sends its traffic to a TCP port on our own machine, tunneling traffic over SSH.
The SSH tunnel is used for connecting through a firewall and establishing a secure connection between the remote server and the developer machine. When the remote server can connect to the developer machine directly (for example, with a Vagrant machine), an SSH tunnel may not be needed.
In this case, we need to make the debugger connect back to the developer machine by setting xdebug.remote_host=ip_address
(for Xdebug 2), xdebug.client_host=ip_address
(for Xdebug 3) or making sure the debug host is the IP address of the developer machine (for Zend Debugger). This can be done using the PhpStorm bookmarklets, a Browser Debugging Extension, or the techniques outlined in Debugging PHP CLI scripts with PhpStorm.
Set up an SSH tunnel
Run the following command on the command line:
ssh -R 9003:localhost:9003 username@hostnamessh -R 9000:localhost:9000 username@hostnamessh -R 10137:localhost:10137 username@hostname
Debug
Once the SSH tunnel is set up, we can start debugging using zero-configuration debugging with Xdebug or Zend Debugger. When the debugger is started, PhpStorm will prompt to accept the incoming connection.
Once we accept it, we will be able to debug using the techniques outlined in Examine a suspended program.
Debug PHP CLI scripts with remote PHP interpreters or via SSH tunnel
When a remote PHP interpreter is properly configured, it's possible to create a run/debug configuration taking advantage of the remote PHP interpreter for debugging.
When the SSH tunnel is up and running, we can also debug PHP CLI scripts. Since the debugger runs on a remote machine, starting a CLI debugging session can be done by using PHP command line switches or using environment variables (on the remote machine). This workflow is not the officially recommended way of debugging, though it might be useful in some cases when the debugging session is needed to be established from the remote server side.
Troubleshooting
The debugger never connects or refuses the connection
When the debugger never connects or refuses the connection, check the following:
Make sure Xdebug is configured to connect to 127.0.0.1 and port 9000 (for Xdebug 2) or port 9003 (for Xdebug 3).
When using Zend Debugger, make sure the PhpStorm bookmarklets or Browser Debugging Extension is configured to connect to 127.0.0.1.
Make sure PhpStorm is listening for incoming debugger connections prior to setting up the SSH tunnel.
When a machine is rebooted or the connection is lost, the SSH tunnel has to be reestablished.
Remote file path is not mapped to any file path in project
In some cases, the debugger can connect, but we get the error messages indicating that no mapping between the remote and project files is defined. This means that PhpStorm cannot determine which local file corresponds to the file being debugged.
We can solve this problem by clicking Click to set up path mappings and providing the necessary path mappings. Additionally, we can configure these mappings using the techniques outlined in Configure synchronization with a server.