Run PHP frameworks in Playground
WordPress Playground is also a browser-based PHP runtime. WordPress is the most common app it boots, but a Blueprint can skip the WordPress download, write any PHP files into the virtual filesystem, and run a framework such as Symfony.
This guide shows the shape of that setup. Use it when you want a shareable demo, a docs example, or a quick compatibility check for a PHP app that does not need a server, database, Node.js, Sass, or a local Composer install.
What changes when you skip WordPress
Set preferredVersions.wp to false in a Blueprint, or wp="none" on a
<php-snippet>. Playground still downloads PHP, mounts a writable filesystem,
runs Blueprint steps, and supports networking when features.networking is
true. It just does not download or boot WordPress.
That makes Playground useful for generic PHP examples:
- PHP libraries that need a real filesystem.
- Framework demos that can run behind
public/index.php. - Documentation snippets that should execute in the browser.
- Reproducible bug reports for PHP code that is not WordPress-specific.
Try a Symfony app
The example below uses a Blueprint to download and unzip a bundled Symfony app
into /app. Then a <php-snippet> boots the Symfony kernel and renders the
dashboard route. The app's Composer dependencies include the WordPress HTML API,
so the snippet can read the <h1> with WP_HTML_Processor without installing or
booting WordPress.
Here is the complete embed:
<script type="module" src="https://playground.wordpress.net/php-code-snippet.js"></script>
<script id="symfony-blueprint" type="application/json">
{
"features": {
"networking": true
},
"steps": [
{
"step": "unzip",
"zipFile": {
"resource": "url",
"url": "https://wordpress.github.io/blueprints/blueprints/symfony-package-radar/symfony-package-radar.zip?v=html-api-2026-06-08"
},
"extractToPath": "/app"
}
]
}
</script>
<php-snippet name="run-symfony.php" wp="none" blueprint="symfony-blueprint">
<script type="application/x-php">
<?php
require '/app/symfony-package-radar/vendor/autoload.php';
use App\Kernel;
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request;
$kernel = new Kernel( 'prod', false );
$request = Request::create( '/' );
$response = $kernel->handle( $request );
$page_title = get_first_h1_text( $response->getContent() );
echo 'HTTP ' . $response->getStatusCode() . PHP_EOL;
echo 'Symfony page: ' . $page_title . PHP_EOL;
echo 'WordPress installed: ';
echo file_exists( '/wordpress/wp-load.php' ) ? 'yes' : 'no';
$kernel->terminate( $request, $response );
/**
* The app's Composer dependencies include the WordPress HTML API, so the
* snippet can read the <h1> with WP_HTML_Processor without installing or
* booting WordPress.
*/
function get_first_h1_text( string $html ): string {
$processor = WP_HTML_Processor::create_fragment( $html );
if ( ! $processor->next_tag( 'H1' ) ) {
return 'unknown';
}
$text = '';
while ( $processor->next_token() ) {
if ( 'H1' === $processor->get_tag() && $processor->is_tag_closer() ) {
break;
}
if ( '#text' === $processor->get_token_type() ) {
$text .= $processor->get_modifiable_text();
}
}
return trim( $text );
}
</script>
<script type="text/expected-output">
HTTP 200
Symfony page: Symfony Playground
WordPress installed: no
</script>
</php-snippet>
The same app is also available as a full Playground page:
Open the Symfony Package Radar demo
Package the app as a ZIP
For framework demos, prefer a ZIP that already contains vendor/. That keeps
the Playground startup path short and avoids asking every visitor to wait for
Composer, Git, and package registry downloads. The Symfony demo uses that path to
bundle both Symfony and a Composer-installed copy of the WordPress HTML API; it
still does not include a WordPress install.
For snippets or CLI runs, a small Blueprint can install the app into /app with
one step:
{
"$schema": "https://playground.wordpress.net/blueprint-schema.json",
"landingPage": "/symfony-package-radar/public/index.php",
"preferredVersions": {
"php": "8.4",
"wp": false
},
"features": {
"networking": true
},
"steps": [
{
"step": "unzip",
"zipFile": {
"resource": "bundled",
"path": "./symfony-package-radar.zip"
},
"extractToPath": "/app"
}
]
}
Use bundled resources when the ZIP ships next to blueprint.json, or use a
url resource when the ZIP is hosted separately. See Blueprint bundles
for packaging details.
For a full-page Playground website, use a Blueprint like the gallery demo. It
adds a tiny router at the Playground document root so the Symfony public/
directory can respond to browser requests.
Keep the demo browser-friendly
A Playground-hosted framework demo works best when it:
- Does not require a long-running background process.
- Stores generated files under the virtual filesystem.
- Avoids native extensions that are not compiled into PHP.wasm.
- Avoids frontend build steps at runtime.
- Keeps network calls optional or resilient, because browsers may require CORS proxying for third-party services.
Those constraints still leave plenty of room for real framework behavior: controllers, routing, dependency injection, templates, forms, HTTP clients, and plain PHP libraries all work when their PHP dependencies are available.