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When I run the following command and keep providing an empty passphrase:

mount -t ecryptfs /to/be/mounted /mount/location

I get:

Passphrase:
Wrong input, non-empty value required!
Passphrase:
Wrong input, non-empty value required!
Passphrase:
Wrong input, non-empty value required!

That's great! But when I try doing the same from a PHP script with the following code:

#!/usr/bin/php
<?php
        system("mount -t ecryptfs /to/be/mounted /mount/location");
?>

I get:

Wrong input, non-empty value required!
Wrong input, non-empty value required!
Wrong input, non-empty value required!
Passphrase:
Passphrase:
Passphrase:

Not great! How do I get PHP to display the output in the right order, at the right time?

1 Answer 1

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Maybe it relates to ,when PHP is running as a server module vs CGI, the system() call tries to automatically flush the web server's output buffer after each line of output.

1
  • It appears that the OP's script is running via CLI and not CGI, notice the shebang. However, you are correct regarding the output buffer, just not in the context of a web server.
    – zamnuts
    Jul 12, 2014 at 5:08

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