13

Given the command:

/usr/bin/php -c /path/to/custom/php.ini /path/to/script.php

I'd like to get the internal options:

-c /path/to/custom/php.ini

Things I've tried that do not work:

  • $argv contains ['/path/to/script.php']
  • getopt('c') contains []
  • $_ENV does not contain it
  • $_SERVER does not contain it

I've also looked for a PHP_* constant (such as PHP_BINARY) but cannot find one for these arguments.

Is there any way to get these arguments? Note that I am not trying to obtain the loaded ini file but any arguments that might be present here.

2
  • would suggest var_export($_SERVER) as first port of call, also, that isnt a script argument, so i doubt you will see it, i seem to remember you will only ever see any args that come AFTER the script. also, are you trying to get the custom INI only? or any argument passed to php? if you just want the ini, look at php.net/manual/en/function.php-ini-loaded-file.php
    – bizzehdee
    Mar 21, 2013 at 21:47
  • echo shell_exec('ps -p '.getmypid().' -o args=');
    – salathe
    Mar 21, 2013 at 23:16

4 Answers 4

3

PHP has no internal way of doing this, so you are going to have to rely on certain system information and permissions.

$pid = getmypid();
$ps = `ps aux | grep $pid`;
$command = substr($ps, strpos($ps, '/usr/bin/php'));
$args = explode(' ', $command); //not pretty, should probably use preg
2
  • It will do unless -H is passed as php argument. Also no need to you can pass -p pid to ps for specific pid - no need for greping. Mar 21, 2013 at 22:22
  • ps aux | grep pid | grep -v grep | awk '{for(i=11;i<=NF;i++) printf $i" ";printf "\n"}' Mar 21, 2013 at 22:32
2

-c /path/to/custom/php.ini is an option passed to the PHP parser, interpretator and other internall stuff before even starting your script.

/path/to/script.php is an actual argument passed not only to the PHP executable, but to your script.

Following arguments like /usr/bin/php -c /path/to/custom/php.ini /path/to/script.php A B C would also be passed to your script.

Unfortunately the -c option is not one of them.

You could get the used php.ini file within the executed PHP script by using get_cfg_var.

echo get_cfg_var('cfg_file_path');

If you are passing the -c option you would get the path to your php.ini file. Otherwise you would get the default php.ini file.

0

Unfortunately, because of how command line BASH arguments are parsed, you won't be able to access the arguments before your script call. Right now, the program /usr/bin/php has

argv[0]=/usr/bin/php
argv[1]=-c
argv[2]=/path/to/custom/php.ini
argv[3]=/path/to/script.php

And that's where your arguments are landing. Your script on the other hand has:

argv[0]=/path/to/script.php

Just because the arguments are processed right to left, and there are no arguments after your script call.

0

I'd use something as follows since it doesn't require any parsing.

$ (ARGS="-c /path/to/custom/php.ini"; /usr/bin/php $ARGS /path/to/script.php $ARGS)
2
  • Some other script might call it on the command line. An external script is not likely to pass the options as an argument. Mar 21, 2013 at 22:54
  • @HaralanDobrev, Yeah, it should be used in a controlled environment
    – Alexander
    Mar 22, 2013 at 16:36

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