Reputation: 5219
How can I run a PHP script from the command line using the PHP interpreter which is used to parse web scripts?
I have a phpinfo.php
file which is accessed from the web shows that German
is installed. However, if I run the phpinfo.php
from the command line using - php phpinfo.php
and grep
for German
, I don't find it. So both PHP files are different. I need to run a script which the php
on which German
is installed.
How can I do this?
Upvotes: 104
Views: 267513
Reputation: 11608
I was looking for a resolution to this issue in Windows, and it seems to be that if you don't have the environment variables ok, you need to put the complete directory. For example, with a file in the same directory as PHP:
F:\myfolder\php\php.exe -f F:\myfolder\php\script.php
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 94
On SUSE Linux, there are two different configuration files for PHP: one for Apache, and one for CLI (command line interface). In the /etc/php5/ directory, you will find an "apache2" directory and a "cli" directory. Each has a "php.ini" file. The files are for the same purpose (PHP configuration), but apply to the two different ways of running PHP. These files, among other things, load the modules PHP uses.
If your OS is similar, then these two files are probably not the same. Your Apache php.ini is probably loading the German module, while the the CLI php.ini isn't. When the module was installed (auto or manual), it probably only updated the Apache php.ini file.
You could simply copy the Apache php.ini file over into the cli
directory to make the CLI environment exactly like the Apache environment.
Or, you could find the line that loads the German module in the Apache file and copy/paste just it to the CLI file.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 4886
You should check your server configuration files. Look for lines that start with LoadModule php
...
There probably are configuration files/directories named mods
or something like that. Start from there.
You could also check output from php -r 'phpinfo();' | grep php
and compare lines to phpinfo();
from web server.
php
interactively:(So you can paste/write code in the console.)
php -a
php -f file.php
php -f file.php > results.html
To run only a small part, one line or like, you can use:
php -r '$x = "Hello World"; echo "$x\n";'
If you are running Linux then do man php
at the console.
If you need/want to run PHP through fpm (FastCGI Process Manager), use cli fcgi:
SCRIPT_NAME="file.php" SCRIP_FILENAME="file.php" REQUEST_METHOD="GET" cgi-fcgi -bind -connect "/var/run/php-fpm/php-fpm.sock"
Where /var/run/php-fpm/php-fpm.sock is your php-fpm socket file.
Upvotes: 191