7

I have a PHP script that seemed to stop running after about 20 minutes.

To try to figure out why, I made a very simple script to see how long it would run without any complex code to confuse me.

I found that the same thing was happening with this simple infinite loop. At some point between 15 and 25 minutes of running, it stops without any message or error. The browser says "Done".

I've been over every single possible thing I could think of:

set_time_limit ( session.gc_maxlifetime in the php.ini)
memory_limit
max_execution_time

The point that the script is stopped is not consistent. Sometimes it will stop at 15 minutes, sometimes 22 minutes.

Please, any help would be greatly appreciated.

It is hosted on a 1and1 server. I contacted them and they don't provide support for bugs caused by developers.

5
  • You may be able to spawn a separate process using exec(). Trying to keep a script running for over 30 minutes by direct browser invocation is pure madness. Jan 18, 2010 at 6:02
  • Do you have access to the error and access logs from the server? They are likely to give you more information on what is happening in this case. Also - can you reproduce the problem locally? That might give you some more options as far as debugging goes. Jan 18, 2010 at 6:11
  • Nah, I don't have access to the logs. That's one thing that really makes me mad. I made a custom PHP error log csv file, but no useful PHP errors :-/ I haven't tested it locally since it takes so long to find out. I figure if it does run properly, then it's some obscure server setting I have no idea about, or if it does stop, then it's some obscure browser problem I have no idea about. Either way it doesn't help much. I'm about to try James's advice above, though, that seems useful. Any other ideas though in the meantime? Jan 18, 2010 at 6:18
  • Well, running it locally would allow you to examine the server logs. Does it occur in only one particular browser? I'm suspecting it doesn't, and I have the feeling your issue is related to memory usage or maybe causing PHP to segfault (which you should be able to see in the server logs) Jan 18, 2010 at 7:11
  • What you can do is specify in your script doing ini_set to: 1) log_errors to on 2) error_log you can set to some file in that dir, like error_log = ./php.log Then run your script, then pull up FTP (which im assuming you have) and check out the file. Jan 18, 2010 at 14:24

6 Answers 6

4

At some point your browser times out and stops loading the page. If you want to test, open up the command line and run the code in there. The script should run indefinitely.

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  • That's what I was thinking! Isn't there any way to prevent the browser from doing that? And color me a noob, but my 1and1 hosting package is the cheapest which doesn't support SSH... and as far as I know, that's the only way to access the php via command line, isn't it? Jan 18, 2010 at 5:37
  • Yes that is basically the only way. Can I ask why you want to indefinitely load? Most browsers (besides mobile) should be fine as long as you are constantly sending them data. Jan 18, 2010 at 5:39
  • Well my infinite loop was just for testing. The script I'm actually trying to fix needs to run for about 30 or 40 minutes, but it keeps stopping after 20. I was trying to figure out why with this one. It does echo a short bit of text every few seconds. Is that not the kind of data the browser needs to keep the session open? Jan 18, 2010 at 5:43
  • Its hard to tell. The information here is very vague. Your problem might still be with your timeout limit in PHP, are you sure that it is still running after it times out? It could be that your hosting company is preventing you from running a script over 30 seconds. Some hosts do this to prevent CPU/server lockups. Read through us.php.net/manual/en/features.connection-handling.php and consider writing to a file when the user closes the connection and making sure that php is still running. Jan 18, 2010 at 5:51
  • Yeah, I've been through all the timeout limits... I contacted 1and1 and they told me that there aren't any time limits like that that they impose. I don't think it is still running after it times out. That's the problem... My original script added data to a database, and once it stopped no more data showed up in the database. (I eliminated MySQL as the problem already, btw) What you said about writing to a file and making sure PHP is still running... What exactly would that do? And... how would I do it? (pardon my noobishness here...) Thanks Jan 18, 2010 at 5:57
3

Have you considered just running the script from the command line, eg:

php script.php

and have the script flush out a message every so often that its still running:

<?php

while (true) {
  doWork();
  echo "still alive...";
  flush();
}
2
  • I'm trying this now... Thanks Jan 18, 2010 at 7:09
  • Try bumping up your max execution time using ini_set ini_set('max_execution_time', 300); //5min Jan 19, 2010 at 4:02
2

in such cases, i turn on all the development settings in php.ini, of course on a development server. This display many more messages, including deprecation warnings.

In my experience of debugging long running php scripts, the most common cause was memory allocation failure (Fatal error: Allowed memory size of xxxx bytes exhausted...)

1

I think what you need to find out is the exact time that it stops (you can set an initial time and keep dumping out the current time minus initial). There is something on the server side that is stopping the file. Also, consider doing an ini_get to check to make sure the execution time is actually 0. If you want, set the time limit to 30 and then EVERY loop you make, continue setting at 30. Every time you call set_time_limit, the counter resets and this might allow you to bypass the actual limits. If this still isn't working, there is something on 1and1's servers that might kill the script.

Also, did you try the ignore_user_abort?

0

I appreciate everyone's comments. Especially James Hartig's, you were very helpful and sent me on the right path. I still don't know what the problem was. I got it to run on the server with using SSH, just by using the exec() command as well as the ignore_user_abort(). But it would still time out. So, I just had to break it into small pieces that will run for only about 2 minutes each, and use session variables/arrays to store where I left off. I'm glad to be done with this fairly simple project now, and am supremely pissed at 1and1. Oh well...

1
  • 1
    Well, you get what you pay for. 1&1 is cheap because it sucks.
    – john.w
    Feb 1, 2012 at 15:40
0

I think this is caused by some process monitor killing off "zombie processes" in order to allow resources for other users.

Run the exec using "2>&1" to log anything including stderr.

In my output I managed to catch this:

...
script.sh: line 4: 15932 Killed                  php5-cli -d max_execution_time=0 -d memory_limit=128M myscript.php

So something (an external force, not PHP itself) is killing my process!

I use IdWebSpace which is excellent BTW but I think most shared hosting providers impose this resource/process control mechanism just to be sane.

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