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Is there a way to distinguish if a script was invoked from the command line or by the web server?

(See What is the canonical way to determine commandline vs. http execution of a PHP script? for best answer and more detailed discussion - didn't find that one before posting)


I have a (non-production) server with Apache 2.2.10 and PHP 5.2.6. On it, in a web-accessible directory is my PHP script, maintenance_tasks.php. I would like to invoke this script from the command line or through a HTTP request (by opening in a browser). Is there some variable that allows me to reliably determine how script is invoked?

(I already tackled the issues of different views for each type of invocation and HTTP response timeout, just looking for a way of telling the two invocation types apart)

I'll be trying different things and add my findings below.

Duplicate: What is the canonical way to determine commandline vs. http execution of a PHP script?

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2 Answers 2

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If called from command line, the server variable HTTP_USER_AGENT is not set. I use this constant to define, whether the script is called from command line or not:

define("CLI", !isset($_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT']));

UPDATE: Since this answer is still marked as the 'correct' one, I'd like to revise my statement - relying on the "User-Agent" header can be problematic, since it's a user-defined value.

Please use php_sapi_name() == 'cli' or PHP_SAPI == 'cli', as suggested by Eugene/cam8001 in the comments.

Thanks for pointing this out!

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  • 72
    Use php_sapi_name() == 'cli' instead Jul 5, 2011 at 18:32
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    Or you can use the constant PHP_SAPI uk3.php.net/manual/en/…
    – cam8001
    Jan 20, 2012 at 17:40
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    Use the constant... if you're allowing a CLI user to do normally restricted things, then all I'd need to do is send you a custom HTTP_USER_AGENT with the string "CLI" somewhere in it. Feb 7, 2012 at 15:27
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    Isn't === better than == for this?
    – Felipe
    Sep 3, 2012 at 0:00
  • 1
    This is potentially insecure, as the User Agent can be set by the user.
    – Joe Hoyle
    Jan 7, 2013 at 16:20
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I've compared the $_SERVER superglobal in both invocations. It seems that $_SERVER['argc'] (i.e. number of arguments passed to the script) is only set when running from shell/command line:

<?php
if (isset($_SERVER['argc'])) {
    define('CLI', true);
} else {
    define('CLI', false);
}

That seems to work both on Linux and Windows hosts. (First I thought about checking for some of the environment variables, but those are different for every operating system. Also, all the $_SERVER['HTTP_*'] headers are missing in the CLI version, but I'm not sure if that's reliable enough.)

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    This doesn't work on some machines as argc/argv is filled with get params! May 9, 2012 at 15:47

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