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Using the ddev Command

Type ddev or ddev -h in a terminal window to see the available DDEV commands. There are commands to configure a project, start, stop, describe, etc. Each command also has help using ddev help <command> or ddev command -h. For example, ddev help snapshot will show help and examples for the snapshot command.

  • ddev config configures a project’s type and docroot.
  • ddev start starts up a project.
  • ddev launch opens a web browser showing the project.
  • ddev list shows current projects and their state.
  • ddev describe gives all the info about the current project.
  • ddev ssh takes you into the web container.
  • ddev exec <command> executes a command inside the web container.
  • ddev stop stops a project and removes its memory usage (but does not throw away any data).
  • ddev poweroff stops all resources that DDEV is using and stops the Mutagen daemon if it’s running.
  • ddev delete destroys the database and DDEV’s knowledge of the project without touching your code.
  • ddev get adds an add-on service.

Lots of Other Commands

  • ddev mysql gives direct access to the MySQL client and ddev psql to the PostgreSQL psql client.
  • ddev sequelace, ddev tableplus, and ddev querious (macOS only, if the app is installed) give access to the Sequel Ace, TablePlus or Querious database browser GUIs.
  • ddev heidisql (Windows/WSL2 only, if installed) gives access to the HeidiSQL database browser GUI.
  • ddev import-db and ddev export-db import or export SQL or compressed SQL files.
  • ddev composer runs Composer inside the container. For example, ddev composer install will do a full composer install for you without even needing Composer on your computer. See developer tools.
  • ddev snapshot makes a very fast snapshot of your database that can be easily and quickly restored with ddev snapshot restore.
  • ddev share requires ngrok and at least a free account on ngrok.com so you can let someone in the next office or on the other side of the planet see your project and what you’re working on. ddev share -h gives more info about how to set up ngrok.
  • ddev xdebug enables Xdebug, ddev xdebug off disables it, and ddev xdebug status shows status. You can toggle Xdebug on and off easily using ddev xdebug toggle.
  • ddev xhprof enables xhprof, ddev xhprof off disables it, and ddev xhprof status shows status.
  • ddev drush (Drupal and Backdrop only) gives direct access to the drush CLI.
  • ddev artisan (Laravel only) gives direct access to the Laravel artisan CLI.
  • ddev magento (Magento2 only) gives access to the magento CLI.
  • ddev craft (Craft CMS only) gives access to the craft CLI.
  • ddev yarn and ddev npm give direct access to the yarn and npm CLIs.

Node.js, npm, nvm, and Yarn

node, nodejs, npm, nvm and yarn are preinstalled in the web container. You can configure the default value of the installed Node.js version with the nodejs_version option in .ddev/config.yaml or with ddev config --nodejs_version. You can also override that with any value using the built-in nvm in the web container or with ddev nvm, for example ddev nvm install 6. There is also a ddev yarn command. (Note that since nodejs_version configuration can now specify any node version, including patch versions, it’s preferred to using the less robust ddev nvm way of specifying the node version.)

More Bundled Tools

In addition to the commands listed above, there are lots of tools included inside the containers:

  • ddev describe tells how to access Mailpit, which captures email in your development environment.
  • Composer, Git, Node.js, npm, nvm, and dozens of other tools are installed in the web container, and you can access them via ddev ssh or ddev exec.
  • ddev logs gets you web server logs; ddev logs -s db gets database server logs.
  • sqlite3 and the mysql and psql clients are inside the web container (and mysql or psql client is also in the db container).

Exporting a Database

You can export a database with ddev export-db, which outputs to stdout or with options to a file:

ddev export-db --file=/tmp/db.sql.gz
ddev export-db --gzip=false --file=/tmp/db.sql
ddev export-db >/tmp/db.sql.gz

ddev import-files

To import static file assets for a project, such as uploaded images and documents, use the command ddev import-files. This command will prompt you to specify the location of your import asset, then import the assets into the project’s upload directory. To define a custom upload directory, set the upload_dirs config option. If no custom upload directory is defined, the default will be used:

  • For Backdrop projects, this is files.
  • For Drupal projects, this is sites/default/files.
  • For Magento 1 projects, this is the media directory.
  • For Magento 2 projects, this is the pub/media directory.
  • For Shopware projects, this is the media directory.
  • For TYPO3 projects, this is the fileadmin directory.
  • For WordPress projects, this is the wp-content/uploads directory.

Other project types need a custom configuration to be able to use this command.

$ ddev import-files
Provide the path to the source directory or archive you wish to import.
Please note: if the destination directory exists, it will be emptied and replaced with the
import assets specified here.
Path to file(s): ~/workspace/d10/.tarballs/files.tgz
You provided an archive. Do you want to extract from a specific path in your
archive? You may leave this blank if you wish to use the full archive contents.
Archive extraction path:
Successfully imported files for d10

ddev import-files supports the following file types: .tar, .tar.gz, .tar.xz, .tar.bz2, .tgz, or .zip.

It can also import a directory containing static assets.

If using a Tar or ZIP archive, the archive should contain only the files inside the files directory. For example in a Drupal site with files at sites/default/files, the archive should only contain the contents of the files directory; it should not contain a single files directory. To do this with the tar command, cd into the directory and create the archive there. An example Tar file creation is:

cd web/sites/default/files
tar -czf ~/Downloads/files.tgz .

If you want to use import-files without answering prompts, use the --source or -s flag to provide the path to the import asset. If you’re importing an archive, and wish to specify the path within the archive to extract, you can use the --extract-path flag in conjunction with the --source flag. Example:

ddev import-files --source=/tmp/files.tgz

When multiple upload_dirs are defined and you want to import to another upload dir than the first one, use the --target or -t flag to provide the path to the desired upload dir:

ddev import-files --target=../private --source=/tmp/files.tgz

See ddev help import-files for more examples.

Snapshotting and Restoring a Database

The project database is stored in a Docker volume, but can be snapshotted (and later restored) with the ddev snapshot command. A snapshot is automatically taken when you run ddev stop --remove-data. For example:

ddev snapshot
Creating database snapshot d9_20220107124831-mariadb_10.3.gz
Created database snapshot d9_20220107124831-mariadb_10.3.gz

ddev snapshot restore d9_20220107124831
Stopping db container for snapshot restore of 'd9_20220107124831-mariadb_10.3.gz'...
Restored database snapshot d9_20220107124831-mariadb_10.3.gz

Snapshots are stored as gzipped files in the project’s .ddev/db_snapshots directory, and the file created for a snapshot can be renamed as necessary. For example, if you rename the above d9_20220107124831-mariadb_10.3.gz file to working-before-migration-mariadb_10.3.gz, then you can use ddev snapshot restore working-before-migration. (The description of the database type and version—mariadb_10.3, for example—must remain intact.) To restore the latest snapshot add the --latest flag (ddev snapshot restore --latest).

List snapshots for an existing project with ddev snapshot --list. (Add the --all option for an exhaustive list; ddev snapshot --list --all.) You can remove all of them with ddev snapshot --cleanup, or remove a single snapshot with ddev snapshot --cleanup --name <snapshot-name>.

Tip

The default 120-second timeout may be inadequate for restores with very large snapshots or slower systems. You can increase this timeout by setting default_container_timeout to a higher value.

A timeout doesn’t necessarily mean the restore failed; you can watch the snapshot restore complete by running ddev logs -s db.

Interacting with Your Project

DDEV provides several commands to facilitate interacting with your project in the development environment. These commands can be run within the working directory of your project while the project is running in DDEV.

Executing Commands in Containers

The ddev exec command allows you to run shell commands in the container for a DDEV service. By default, commands are executed on the web service container, in the docroot path of your project. This allows you to use the developer tools included in the web container. For example, to run the ls command in the web container, you would run ddev exec ls or ddev . ls.

To run a shell command in the container for a different service, use the --service (or -s) flag at the beginning of your exec command to specify the service the command should be run against. For example, to run the MySQL client in the database, container, you would run ddev exec --service db mysql. To specify the directory in which a shell command will be run, use the --dir flag. For example, to see the contents of the /usr/bin directory, you would run ddev exec --dir /usr/bin ls.

To run privileged commands, sudo can be passed into ddev exec. For example, to update the container’s apt package lists, use ddev exec sudo apt-get update.

Commands can also be executed using the shorter ddev . <cmd> alias.

Normally, ddev exec commands are executed in the container using Bash, which means that environment variables and redirection and pipes can be used. For example, a complex command like ddev exec 'ls -l ${DDEV_FILES_DIR} | grep x >/tmp/junk.out' will be interpreted by Bash and will work. However, there are cases where Bash introduces too much complexity and it’s best to run the command directly. In those cases, something like ddev exec --raw ls -l "dir1" "dir2" may be useful. With --raw, the ls command is executed directly instead of the full command being interpreted by Bash. But you cannot use environment variables, pipes, redirection, etc.

SSH Into Containers

The ddev ssh command opens an interactive Bash or sh shell session to the container for a DDEV service. The web service is connected by default, and the session can be ended by typing exit. To connect to another service, use the --service flag to specify the service you want to connect to. For example, to connect to the database container, you would run ddev ssh --service db. To specify the destination directory, use the --dir flag. For example, to connect to the database container and be placed into the /home directory, you would run ddev ssh --service db --dir /home.

You can also use your personal SSH keys within the web container. Run ddev auth ssh to add the keys from your ~/.ssh directory and provide a passphrase, and those keys will be usable from within the web container. You generally only have to ddev auth ssh one time per computer reboot. This is a very popular approach for accessing private Composer repositories, or for using drush aliases against remote servers.

ddev logs

The ddev logs command allows you to easily view error logs from the web container (both nginx/Apache and php-fpm logs are concatenated). To follow the logs in real time, run ddev logs -f. When you’re done, press CTRL + C to exit the log trail. Similarly, ddev logs -s db will show logs from a running or stopped database container.

Stopping a Project

To remove a project’s containers, run ddev stop in the project’s working directory. To remove any running project’s containers regardless of context, specify the project name as an argument: ddev stop <projectname>.

ddev stop is not destructive. It removes the Docker containers but does not remove the database for the project, and does nothing to your code. This allows you to have many configured projects with databases loaded without wasting Docker containers on unused projects. ddev stop does not affect the project codebase and files.

To remove the imported database for a project, use the flag --remove-data, as in ddev stop --remove-data. This command will destroy both the containers and the imported database contents.