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Since version 4.3, PHP supports a new
SAPI type (Server Application Programming Interface)
named CLI which means Command Line
Interface. As the name implies, this SAPI type
main focus is on developing shell (or desktop as well) applications with
PHP. There are quite some differences between the
CLI SAPI and other SAPIs which are
further explained throughout this chapter.
The CLI SAPI was released for the first time with
PHP 4.2.0, but was still experimental back then and had
to be explicitely enabled with --enable-cli when running
./configure. Since PHP 4.3.0 the
CLI SAPI is no longer experimental and is therefore
always built and installed as the
php (called php.exe on Windows)
binary.
Remarkable differences of the CLI SAPI compared to other
SAPIs:
Unlikely the CGI SAPI, no headers are written to the
output.
Though the CGI SAPI provies a way to suppress HTTP
headers, there's not equivalent switch to enable them in the CLI
SAPI.
The are certain php.ini directives which are overriden by the CLI
SAPI because the do not make sense in shell environments:
Tableau 24-1. Overriden php.ini directives Directive | CLI SAPI default value | Comment |
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html_errors | FALSE |
It can be quite hard to read the error message in your shell when
it's cluttered with all those meaningless HTML
tags, therefore this directive defaults to FALSE.
| implicit_flush | TRUE |
It is desired that any output coming from
print(), echo() and friends is
immidiately written to the output and not cached in any buffer. You
still can use output buffering
if you want to defer or manipulate standard output.
| max_execution_time | 0 (unlimited) |
Due to endless possibilities of using PHP in
shell environments, the maximum execution time has been set to
unlimited. Whereas applications written for the web are executed
within splits of a seconds, shell application tend to have a much
longer execution time.
| register_argc_argv | TRUE |
The global PHP variables $argc
(number of arguments passed to the application) and
$argv (array of the actual arguments) are always
registered and filled in with the appropriate values when using the
CLI SAPI.
|
Note�:
These directives cannot be initialzied with another value from the
configuration file php.ini or a custom one (if specified). This is a
limitation because those default values are applied after all
configuration files have been parsed. However, their value can be changed
during runtime (which does not make sense for all of those directives,
e.g. register_argc_argv).
To ease working in the shell environment, the following constants
are defined:
Tableau 24-2. CLI specific Constants Constant | Description |
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STDIN |
An already opened stream to stdin. This saves
opening it with
$stdin = fopen('php://stdin', 'r'); |
| STDOUT |
An already opened stream to stdout. This saves
opening it with
$stdout = fopen('php://stdout', 'w'); |
| STDERR |
An already opened stream to stdout. This saves
opening it with
$stderr = fopen('php://stderr', 'w'); |
|
Given the above, you don't need to open e.g. a stream for
stderr yourself but simply use the constant instead of
the stream resource:
php -r 'fwrite(STDERR, "stderr\n");' |
You do not need to explicitly close these streams, this is automatically
done by PHP.
The CLI SAPI does not change the current directory to the directory
of the executed script !
Example showing the difference to the CGI SAPI:
<?php
/* Our simple test application */
echo getcwd(), "\n";
?> |
When using the CGI version, the output is
$ pwd
/tmp
$ php-cgi -f another_directory/test.php
/tmp/another_directory |
This clearly shows that PHP changes its current
directory to the one of the executed script.
Using the CLI SAPI yields:
$ pwd
/tmp
$ php -f another_directory/test.php
/tmp |
This allows greater flexibility when writing shell tools in
PHP.
Note�:
The CGI SAPI supports the CLI SAPI
behaviour by means of the -C switch when ran from the
command line.
The list of command line options provided by the PHP
binary can be queried anytime by running PHP with the
-h switch:
Usage: php [options] [-f] <file> [args...]
php [options] -r <code> [args...]
php [options] [-- args...]
-s Display colour syntax highlighted source.
-w Display source with stripped comments and whitespace.
-f <file> Parse <file>.
-v Version number
-c <path>|<file> Look for php.ini file in this directory
-a Run interactively
-d foo[=bar] Define INI entry foo with value 'bar'
-e Generate extended information for debugger/profiler
-z <file> Load Zend extension <file>.
-l Syntax check only (lint)
-m Show compiled in modules
-i PHP information
-r <code> Run PHP <code> without using script tags <?..?>
-h This help
args... Arguments passed to script. Use -- args when first argument
starts with - or script is read from stdin |
The CLI SAPI has three different ways of getting the
PHP code you want to execute:
Telling PHP to execute a certain file.
php my_script.php
php -f my_script.php |
Both ways (using the -f switch or not) execute the
given file my_script.php. You can choose any file to
execute, your PHP scripts do not have to end with the
.php extension but can give them any name or extension
you want them to have.
Pass the PHP code to execute directly on the command
line.
php -r 'print_r(get_defined_constants());' |
Special care has to be taken in regards of shell variable substitution and
quoting usage.
Note�:
Read the example carefully, thera are no beginning or ending tags! The
-r switch simply does not need them. Using them will
lead to a parser error.
Provide the PHP code to execute via standard input
(stdin).
This gives the powerful ability to dynamically create
PHP code and feed it to the binary, as shown in this
(fictional) example:
$ some_application | some_filter | php | sort -u >final_output.txt |
You cannot combine any of the three ways to execute code.
Like every shell application, the PHP binary
accepts a number of arguments but also your PHP script
can receive them. The number of arguments which can be passed to your script
is not limited by PHP (the shell has a certain size limit
in numbers of characters which can be passed; usually you won't hit this
limit). The arguments passed to your script are available in the global
array $argv. The zero index always contains the script
name (which is - in case the PHP code
is coming from either standard input or from the command line switch
-r). The second registered global variable is
$argc which contains the number of elements in the
$argv array (not the
number of arguments passed to the script).
As long as the arguments you want to pass to your script do not start with
the - character, there's nothing special to watch out
for. Passing an argument to your script which starts with a
- will cause trouble because PHP
itself thinks it has to handle it. To prevent this use the argument list
separator --. After the argument has been parsed by
PHP, every argument following it is passed
untoched/unparsed to your script.
# This will not execute the given code but will show the PHP usage
$ php -r 'var_dump($argv);' -h
Usage: php [options] [-f] <file> [args...]
[...]
# This will pass the '-h' argument to your script and prevent PHP from showing it's usage
$ php -r 'var_dump($argv);' -- -h
array(2) {
[0]=>
string(1) "-"
[1]=>
string(2) "-h"
} |
However, there's another way of using PHP for shell
scripting. You can write a script where the first line starts with
#!/usr/bin/php and then following the normal
PHP code included within the PHP
starting and end tags and set the execution attributes of the file
appropriately. This way it can be executed like a normal shell or perl
script:
#!/usr/bin/php
<?php
var_dump($argv);
?> |
Assuming this file is named test in the current
directory, we can now do the following:
$ chmod 755 test
$ ./test -h -- foo
array(4) {
[0]=>
string(6) "./test"
[1]=>
string(2) "-h"
[2]=>
string(2) "--"
[3]=>
string(3) "foo"
} |
As you see no care has to be taken when passing parameters to your script
which start with -.
Tableau 24-3. Command line options Option | Description |
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-s |
Display colour syntax highlighted source.
This option uses the internal mechanism to parse the file and produces
a HTML highlighted version of it and writes it to
standard output. Note that all it does it to generate a block of
<code> [...] </code>
HTML tags, no HTML headers.
Note�:
This option does not work together with the -r
option.
| -w |
Display source with stripped comments and whitespace.
Note�:
This option does not work together with the -r
option.
| -f |
Parses and executed the given filename to the -f
option. This switch is optional and can be left out. Only providing
the filename to execute is sufficient.
| -v |
Writes the PHP, PHP SAPI, and Zend version to standard output, e.g.
$ php -v
PHP 4.3.0-dev (cli), Copyright (c) 1997-2002 The PHP Group
Zend Engine v1.2.1, Copyright (c) 1998-2002 Zend Technologies |
| -c |
With this option one can either specify a directory where to look for
php.ini or you can specify a custom INI file
directly (which does not need to be named php.ini), e.g.:
$ php -c /custom/directory/ my_script.php
$ php -c /custom/directory/custom-file.ini my_script.php |
| -a |
Runs PHP interactively.
| -d |
This option allows to set a custom value for any of the configuration
directives allowed in php.ini. The syntax is:
-d configuration_directive[=value] |
Examples:
# Ommiting the value part will set the given configuration directive to "1"
$ php -d max_execution_time -r '$foo = ini_get("max_execution_time"); var_dump($foo);'
string(1) "1"
# Passing an empty value part will set the configuration directive to ""
php -d max_execution_time= -r '$foo = ini_get("max_execution_time"); var_dump($foo);'
string(0) ""
# The configuration directive will be set to anything passed after the '=' character
$ php -d max_execution_time=20 -r '$foo = ini_get("max_execution_time"); var_dump($foo);'
string(2) "20"
$ php -d max_execution_time=doesntmakesense -r '$foo = ini_get("max_execution_time"); var_dump($foo);'
string(15) "doesntmakesense" |
| -e |
Generate extended information for debugger/profiler.
| -z |
Load Zend extension. If only a filename is given, PHP tries to load
this extension from the current default library path on your system
(usually specified /etc/ld.so.conf on Linux
systems). Passing a filename with an absolute path information will
not use the systems library search path. A relative filename with a
directory information will tell PHP only to try to
load the extension relative to the current directory.
| -l |
This option provides a convenient way to only perform a syntax check
on the given PHP code. On succes, the text
No syntax errors detected in <filename> is
written to standard output and the shell return code is
0. On failure, the text Errors parsing
<filename> in addition to the internal parser error
message is written to standard output and the shell return code is set
to 255.
This option won't find fatal errors (like undefined functions). Use
-f if you would like to test for fatal errors too.
Note�:
This option does not work together with the -r
option.
| -m |
Using this option, PHP prints out the built in (and loaded) PHP and
Zend modules:
$ php -m
[PHP Modules]
xml
tokenizer
standard
session
posix
pcre
overload
mysql
mbstring
ctype
[Zend Modules] |
| -i |
This command line option calls phpinfo(), and prints
out the results. If PHP is not working well, it is
advisable to make a php -i and see if any error
messages are printed out before or in place of the information tables.
Beware that the output is in HTML and therefore
quite huge.
| -r |
This option allows execution of PHP right from
within the command line. The PHP start and end tags
(<?php and ?>) are
not needed and will cause a parser
errors.
Note�:
Care has to be taken when using this form of PHP
to not collide with command line variable substitution done by the
shell.
Example showing a parser error
$ php -r "$foo = get_defined_constants();"
Command line code(1) : Parse error - parse error, unexpected '=' |
The problem here is that the sh/bash performs variable substritution
even when using double quotes ". Since the
variable $foo is unlikely to be defined, it
expands to nothing which results in being the code passed to
PHP for executin in fact reads:
$ php -r " = get_defined_constants();" |
The correct way would be to use single quotes '.
variables in strings quoted with single quotes are not expanded
by sh/bash.
$ php -r '$foo = get_defined_constants(); var_dump($foo);'
array(370) {
["E_ERROR"]=>
int(1)
["E_WARNING"]=>
int(2)
["E_PARSE"]=>
int(4)
["E_NOTICE"]=>
int(8)
["E_CORE_ERROR"]=>
[...] |
If you are using a shell different from sh/bash, you might experience
further issues. Feel free to open a bug report or send a mail to
[email protected].
One still can easily run intro troubles when trying to get shell
variables into the code or using backslashes for escaping. You've
been warned.
| -h |
With this option, you can get information about the actual list of
command line options and some one line descriptions about what they do.
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The PHP executable can be used to run PHP scripts absolutely independent
from the web server. If you are on a Unix system, you should add a special
first line to your PHP script, and make it executable, so the system will
know, what program should run the script. On a Windows platform you can
associate php.exe with the double click option of the
.php files, or you can make a batch file to run the
script through PHP. The first line added to the script to work on Unix won't
hurt on Windows, so you can write cross platform programs this way. A simple
example of writing a command line PHP program can be found below.
Exemple 24-1. Script intended to be run from command line (script.php) #!/usr/bin/php
<?php
if ($argc != 2 || in_array($argv[1], array('--help', '-help', '-h', '-?'))) {
?>
This is a command line PHP script with one option.
Usage:
<?php echo $argv[0]; ?> <option>
<option> can be some word you would like
to print out. With the --help, -help, -h,
or -? options, you can get this help.
<?php
} else {
echo $argv[1];
}
?> |
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In the script above, we used the special first line to indicate,
that this file should be run by PHP. We work with a CLI version
here, so there will be no HTTP header printouts. There are two
variables you can use while writing command line applications with
PHP: $argc and $argv. The
first is the number of arguments plus one (the name of the script
running). The second is an array containing the arguments, starting
with the script name as number zero ($argv[0]).
In the program above we checked if there are less or more than one
arguments. Also if the argument was --help,
-help, -h or -?,
we printed out the help message, printing the script name dynamically.
If we received some other argument we echoed that out.
If you would like to run the above script on Unix, you need to
make it executable, and simply call it as
script.php echothis or
script.php -h. On Windows, you can make a
batch file for this task:
Exemple 24-2. Batch file to run a command line PHP script (script.bat) @c:\php\php.exe script.php %1 %2 %3 %4 |
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Assuming, you named the above program as
script.php, and you have your
php.exe in
c:\php\php.exe this batch file
will run it for you with your added options:
script.bat echothis or
script.bat -h.
See also the Readline
extension documentation for more functions you can use
to enhance your command line applications in PHP.
User Contributed Notes Using PHP from the command line |
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[email protected]
13-Jun-2002 09:40 |
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PHP 4.3 and above automatically have STDOUT, STDIN, and STDERR openned ...
but < 4.3.0 do not. This is how you make code that will work in
versions previous to PHP 4.3 and future versions without any
changes:
if (version_compare(phpversion(),'4.3.0','<'))
{ define('STDIN',fopen("php://stdin","r")); define('STDOUT',fopen("php://stout","r")); define('STDERR',fopen("php://sterr","r")); register_shutdown_function(
create_function( '' , 'fclose(STDIN); fclose(STOUT); fclose(STERR); return
true;' ) ); }
/* get some STDIN up to 256 bytes */ $str =
fgets(STDIN,256);
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daveATtechweaversDOTnet
14-Jun-2002 06:46 |
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a few missing d's in the handy function. here it is with the typos
fixed
if (version_compare(phpversion(),'4.3.0','<'))
{
define('STDIN',fopen("php://stdin","r"));
define('STDOUT',fopen("php://stdout","r"));
define('STDERR',fopen("php://stderr","r"));
register_shutdown_function( create_function( '' , 'fclose(STDIN);
fclose(STDOUT); fclose(STDERR); return true;' ) ); }
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[email protected]
18-Jun-2002 02:41 |
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In the STDOUT and STDERR parts of the function, try opening them with a
"w" instead of an "r" if you want to use them =)
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[email protected]
27-Jun-2002 09:52 |
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You will only be able to use $argc and $argv if you have in
php.ini: register_globals = On register_argc_argv = On
If you
have register_globals = Off, then you should use $_SERVER['argc'] and
$_SERVER['argv'][0]. (recommended approach)
Also for some reason
php "-c /my/path/php.ini" did not work for me. I had to use
"php -c /my/path/" which looks for php.ini in the specified
path. This is for PHP 4.2.1 (compiled under FreeBSD).
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[email protected]
17-Jul-2002 09:34 |
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I was wondering how i would get input from a command in php
if i run
this command
ls -d blah
and I wanted to see if blah was
there how could i get the information from unix?
I am not sure how
to capture this I am getting fusterated! :P
Thanks Adam
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[email protected]
19-Jul-2002 05:04 |
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Wow, this CLI SAPI is a great new feature to see. Now all we need is to get
some of the popular Linux distributions including a /usr/bin/php and
people can start developing shell applications in PHP and ditch Perl
forever ;)
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[email protected]
04-Aug-2002 03:17 |
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If you want to get the output of a command use the function
shell_exec($command) - it returns a string with the output of the command.
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zager[..A..T..]teleaction.de
15-Aug-2002 05:15 |
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Under Solaris (at least 2.6) I have some problems with reading stdin.
Original pbms report may be found here:
q=Re:+%5BPHP%5D+Q+on+php://stdin+--+an+answer!&hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF- 8&oe=UTF-8&selm=3C74AF57.6090704%40Sun.COM&rnum=1
At
a first glance the only solution for it is
'fgetcsv'
#!/usr/local/bin/php
-q <?php
set_magic_quotes_runtime(0); $fd=fopen("php://stdin","r"); if
(!$fd) exit;
while (!feof ($fd)) { $s =
fgetcsv($fd,128,"\n"); if ($s==false)
continue;
echo $s[0]."\n"; } ?>
But... keep reading....
>>> I
wrote Hello, Sometimes I hate PHP... ;)
Right today I was
trapped by some strange bug in my code with reading stdin using
fgetcsv. After a not small investigation I found that strings like
"foo\nboo\ndoo"goo\n (take note of double quatation sign in
it) interpreted by fgetcsv
like: 1->foo\nboo\ndoo 2->goo since double quotation mark
has a special meaning and get stripped off of the input stream. Indeed,
according to PHP manual: [quote] array fgetcsv ( int fp, int length
[, string delimiter [, string enclosure]])
[skip] another
delimiter with the optional third parameter.
_The_enclosure_character_is_double_quote_,_unless_ it_is_specified_. [skip] _enclosure_is_added_from_PHP
4.3.0. !!!!!! [/quote]
Means no chance for us prior to
4.3.0 :( But file() works just fine !!!! Of course by the price of
memory, so be careful with large
files.
set_magic_quotes_runtime(0); // important, do not forget it
!!! $s=file("php://stdin"); for
($i=0,$n=sizeof($s);$i<$n;$i++) {
do_something_useful(rtrim($s[$i])); }
Conclusion: 1. If you
have no double quotation mark in your data use fgetcsv 2. From 4.3.0
use fgetcsv($fd,"\n",""); // I hope it will
help 3. If you data is not huge use
file("php://stdin");
Hope now it's cleared for 100% (to
myself ;)
Good luck! Dim
PS. Don't forget that it's only
Solaris specific problem. Under Linux just use usual fgets()...
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