Reputation: 10981
Is there a way to know the avaliable ram in a server (linux distro) with php (widthout using linux commands)?
edit: sorry, the objective is to be aware of the ram available in the server / virtual machine, for the particular server (even if that memory is shared).
Upvotes: 43
Views: 54987
Reputation: 33
exec("grep MemTotal /proc/meminfo", $aryMem); $aryMem[0] has your total ram minus kernel usage.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 3711
I don't think you can access the host server memory info without a special written PHP extension. The PHP core library does not allow (perhaps for security reasons) to access the extended memory info.
However, if your script has access to the /proc/meminfo
then you can query that special file and grab the info you need. On Windows (although you've not asked for it) we can use the com_dotnet
PHP extension to query the Windows framework via COM.
Below you can find my getSystemMemoryInfo
that returns that info for you no matter if you run the script on a Linux/Windows server. The wmiWBemLocatorQuery
is just a helper function.
function wmiWBemLocatorQuery( $query ) {
if ( class_exists( '\\COM' ) ) {
try {
$WbemLocator = new \COM( "WbemScripting.SWbemLocator" );
$WbemServices = $WbemLocator->ConnectServer( '127.0.0.1', 'root\CIMV2' );
$WbemServices->Security_->ImpersonationLevel = 3;
// use wbemtest tool to query all classes for namespace root\cimv2
return $WbemServices->ExecQuery( $query );
} catch ( \com_exception $e ) {
echo $e->getMessage();
}
} elseif ( ! extension_loaded( 'com_dotnet' ) )
trigger_error( 'It seems that the COM is not enabled in your php.ini', E_USER_WARNING );
else {
$err = error_get_last();
trigger_error( $err['message'], E_USER_WARNING );
}
return false;
}
// _dir_in_allowed_path this is your function to detect if a file is withing the allowed path (see the open_basedir PHP directive)
function getSystemMemoryInfo( $output_key = '' ) {
$keys = array( 'MemTotal', 'MemFree', 'MemAvailable', 'SwapTotal', 'SwapFree' );
$result = array();
try {
// LINUX
if ( ! isWin() ) {
$proc_dir = '/proc/';
$data = _dir_in_allowed_path( $proc_dir ) ? @file( $proc_dir . 'meminfo' ) : false;
if ( is_array( $data ) )
foreach ( $data as $d ) {
if ( 0 == strlen( trim( $d ) ) )
continue;
$d = preg_split( '/:/', $d );
$key = trim( $d[0] );
if ( ! in_array( $key, $keys ) )
continue;
$value = 1000 * floatval( trim( str_replace( ' kB', '', $d[1] ) ) );
$result[$key] = $value;
}
} else // WINDOWS
{
$wmi_found = false;
if ( $wmi_query = wmiWBemLocatorQuery(
"SELECT FreePhysicalMemory,FreeVirtualMemory,TotalSwapSpaceSize,TotalVirtualMemorySize,TotalVisibleMemorySize FROM Win32_OperatingSystem" ) ) {
foreach ( $wmi_query as $r ) {
$result['MemFree'] = $r->FreePhysicalMemory * 1024;
$result['MemAvailable'] = $r->FreeVirtualMemory * 1024;
$result['SwapFree'] = $r->TotalSwapSpaceSize * 1024;
$result['SwapTotal'] = $r->TotalVirtualMemorySize * 1024;
$result['MemTotal'] = $r->TotalVisibleMemorySize * 1024;
$wmi_found = true;
}
}
// TODO a backup implementation using the $_SERVER array
}
} catch ( Exception $e ) {
echo $e->getMessage();
}
return empty( $output_key ) || ! isset( $result[$output_key] ) ? $result : $result[$output_key];
}
Example on a 8GB RAM system
print_r(getSystemMemoryInfo());
Output
Array
(
[MemTotal] => 8102684000
[MemFree] => 2894508000
[MemAvailable] => 4569396000
[SwapTotal] => 4194300000
[SwapFree] => 4194300000
)
If you want to understand what each field represent then read more.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1173
Small and tidy function to get all of its values associated to their keys.
$contents = file_get_contents('/proc/meminfo');
preg_match_all('/(\w+):\s+(\d+)\s/', $contents, $matches);
$info = array_combine($matches[1], $matches[2]);
// $info['MemTotal'] = "2047442"
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 4472
Using /proc/meminfo
and getting everything into an array is simple:
<?php
function getSystemMemInfo()
{
$data = explode("\n", file_get_contents("/proc/meminfo"));
$meminfo = array();
foreach ($data as $line) {
list($key, $val) = explode(":", $line);
$meminfo[$key] = trim($val);
}
return $meminfo;
}
?>
var_dump( getSystemMemInfo() );
array(43) {
["MemTotal"]=>
string(10) "2060700 kB"
["MemFree"]=>
string(9) "277344 kB"
["Buffers"]=>
string(8) "92200 kB"
["Cached"]=>
string(9) "650544 kB"
["SwapCached"]=>
string(8) "73592 kB"
["Active"]=>
string(9) "995988 kB"
...
Upvotes: 43
Reputation: 9
// helpers
/**
* @return array|null
*/
protected function getSystemMemInfo()
{
$meminfo = @file_get_contents("/proc/meminfo");
if ($meminfo) {
$data = explode("\n", $meminfo);
$meminfo = [];
foreach ($data as $line) {
if( strpos( $line, ':' ) !== false ) {
list($key, $val) = explode(":", $line);
$val = trim($val);
$val = preg_replace('/ kB$/', '', $val);
if (is_numeric($val)) {
$val = intval($val);
}
$meminfo[$key] = $val;
}
}
return $meminfo;
}
return null;
}
// example call to check health
public function check() {
$memInfo = $this->getSystemMemInfo();
if ($memInfo) {
$totalMemory = $memInfo['MemTotal'];
$freeMemory = $memInfo['MemFree'];
$swapTotalMemory = $memInfo['SwapTotal'];
$swapFreeMemory = $memInfo['SwapFree'];
if (($totalMemory / 100.0) * 30.0 > $freeMemory) {
if (($swapTotalMemory / 100.0) * 50.0 > $swapFreeMemory) {
return new Failure('Less than 30% free memory and less than 50% free swap space');
}
return new Warning('Less than 30% free memory');
}
}
return new Success('ok');
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 12829
If you know this code will only be running under Linux, you can use the special /proc/meminfo
file to get information about the system's virtual memory subsystem. The file has a form like this:
MemTotal: 255908 kB
MemFree: 69936 kB
Buffers: 15812 kB
Cached: 115124 kB
SwapCached: 0 kB
Active: 92700 kB
Inactive: 63792 kB
...
That first line, MemTotal: ...
, contains the amount of physical RAM in the machine, minus the space reserved by the kernel for its own use. It's the best way I know of to get a simple report of the usable memory on a Linux system. You should be able to extract it via something like the following code:
<?php
$fh = fopen('/proc/meminfo','r');
$mem = 0;
while ($line = fgets($fh)) {
$pieces = array();
if (preg_match('/^MemTotal:\s+(\d+)\skB$/', $line, $pieces)) {
$mem = $pieces[1];
break;
}
}
fclose($fh);
echo "$mem kB RAM found"; ?>
(Please note: this code may require some tweaking for your environment.)
Upvotes: 48
Reputation: 2522
It is worth noting that in Windows this information (and much more) can be acquired by executing and parsing the output of the shell command: systeminfo
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1456
Linux commands can be run using the exec function in PHP. This is efficient and will do the job(if objective is to get the memory).
Try the following code:
<?php
exec("free -mtl", $output);
print_r($output);
?>
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 401022
I don't remember having ever seen such a function -- its kind of out the scope of what PHP is made for, actually.
Even if there was such a functionnality, it would probably be implemented in a way that would be specific to the underlying operating system, and wouldn't probably work on both Linux and windows (see sys_getloadavg
for an example of that kind of thing)
Upvotes: 0