Installing PHP 7 and Composer on Windows 10, Natively

Note: If you want to install and use PHP 7 and Composer within the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) using Ubuntu, I wrote a guide for that, too!

I am working a lot on Composer-based Drupal projects lately (especially gearing up for DrupalCon Nashville and my joint workshop on Drupal and Composer with Matthew Grasmick), and have been trying to come up with the simplest solutions that work across macOS, Linux, and Windows. For macOS and Linux, getting PHP and Composer installed is fairly quick and easy. However, on Windows there seem to crop up little issues here and there.

Since I finally spent a little time getting the official version of PHP for native Windows installed, I figured I'd document the process here. Note that many parts of this process were learned from the concise article Install PHP7 and Composer on Windows 10 from the website KIZU 514.

Install PHP 7 on Windows 10

PHP 7 running in Windows 10 in PowerShell

  1. Install the Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2015—this is linked in the sidebar of the PHP for Windows Download page, but it's kind of hidden. If you don't do this, you'll run into a rather cryptic error message, VCRUNTIME140.DLL was not found, and php commands won't work.
  2. Download PHP for Windows. I prefer to use 7.1.x (current release - 1), so I downloaded the latest Non-thread-safe 64-bit version of 7.1.x. I downloaded the .zip file version of the VC14 x64 Non Thread Safe edition, under the PHP 7.1 heading.
  3. Expand the zip file into the path C:\PHP7.
  4. Configure PHP to run correctly on your system:
    1. In the C:\PHP7 folder, rename the file php.ini-development to php.ini.
    2. Edit the php.ini file in a text editor (e.g. Notepad++, Atom, or Sublime Text).
    3. Change the following settings in the file and save the file:
      1. Change memory_limit from 128M to 1G (because Composer can use lots of memory!)
      2. Uncomment the line that reads ; extension_dir = "ext" (remove the ; so the line is just extension_dir = "ext").
      3. In the section where there are a bunch of extension= lines, uncomment the following lines:
        1. extension=php_gd2.dll
        2. extension=php_curl.dll
        3. extension=php_mbstring.dll
        4. extension=php_openssl.dll
        5. extension=php_pdo_mysql.dll
        6. extension=php_pdo_sqlite.dll
        7. extension=php_sockets.dll
  5. Add C:\PHP7 to your Windows system path:
    1. Open the System Control Panel.
    2. Click 'Advanced System Settings'.
    3. Click the 'Environment Variables...' button.
    4. Click on the Path row under 'System variables', and click 'Edit...'
    5. Click 'New' and add the row C:\PHP7.
    6. Click OK, then OK, then OK, and close out of the System Control Panel.
  6. Open PowerShell or another terminal emulator (I generally prefer cmder), and type in php -v to verify PHP is working.

At this point, you should see output like:

Windows PowerShell
Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

PS C:\Users\jgeerling> php -v
PHP 7.0.29 (cli) (built: Mar 27 2018 15:23:04) ( NTS )
Copyright (c) 1997-2017 The PHP Group
Zend Engine v3.0.0, Copyright (c) 1998-2017 Zend Technologies

This means PHP is working, yay!

Install Composer on Windows 10

Composer running in Windows 10 in PowerShell

Next, we're going to install Composer by downloading it and moving it into place so we can run it with just the composer command:

  1. Download the Windows Installer for Composer and run it.
  2. Note that the Windows Installer for Composer might ask to make changes to your php.ini file. That's okay; allow it and continue through the setup wizard.
  3. Close out of any open PowerShell or other terminal windows, and then open a new one.
  4. Run the composer command, and verify you get a listing of the Composer help and available commands.

That's it! Now you have PHP 7 and Composer running natively on your Windows 10 PC. Next up, dominate the world with some new PHP projects!

Comments

Still very useful :-) The extensions in step 4.3 have changed names a bit, but it's not hard to find the ones to enable.

For those complaining about windows permissions... why not just build everything in a Docker container?
I develop locally and put everything in a folder that has a docker build process. That way when you have all your tests satisfied locally, the docker build handles creating the correct permissions and installing whatever app

This was spot on the right way to install php and composer, worked for me just fine..(-/-)

Many thanks for this. I'm an extreme novice.
I've just installed PHP8
the php.ini mods are different, but I hope they work.
Composer installed OK.