1999

I have checked my PHP ini file (php.ini) and display_errors is set and also error reporting is E_ALL. I have restarted my Apache webserver.

I have even put these lines at the top of my script, and it doesn't even catch simple parse errors. For example, I declare variables with a "$" and I don't close statements";". But all my scripts show a blank page on these errors, but I want to actually see the errors in my browser output.

error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', 1);

What is left to do?

3
  • 10
    I've yet to nail down exactly why this works sometimes and not others, but for anyone wanting to quickly toggle errors in a php script (or enable them via a $_REQUEST parameter) these two lines will work most of the time. Oct 28, 2013 at 20:15
  • well you can see details of the error by enabling xdebug from php ini file.
    – jewelhuq
    Jan 13, 2016 at 10:14
  • 1
    Most specific editors / IDEs like e.g. Notepad++,Eclipse have builtin syntax check and highlighting, They will show you issues like you described. Please don't turn on the display of errors on a live system. Hackers will love this, because in most cases paths are shown. You can define error / exeception handler. In this handler you could log the issue and send a mail to the developer, so that he can fix it immediately when an issue occurs. see php.net/manual/en/function.set-error-handler.php and php.net/manual/en/function.set-exception-handler.php Dec 10, 2020 at 8:08

27 Answers 27

3576
Answer recommended by PHP Collective

DEV environment

This always works for me:

ini_set('display_errors', '1');
ini_set('display_startup_errors', '1');
error_reporting(E_ALL);

However, this doesn't make PHP to show parse errors occurred in the same file. Also, these settings can be overridden by PHP. In these cases the only way to show those errors is to modify your php.ini (or php-fpm.conf) with this line:

display_errors = on

(if you don't have access to php.ini, then putting this line in .htaccess might work too):

php_flag display_errors 1

PROD environment

Note that above recommendation is only suitable for the DEV environment. On a live site it must be

display_errors = off
log_errors = on

And then you'll be able to see all errors in the error log. See Where to find PHP error log

AJAX calls

In case of AJAX call, on a DEV server, open DevTools (F12), then Network tab. Then initiate the request which result you want to see, and it will appear in the Network tab. Click on it and then the Response tab. There you will see the exact output.

While on a live server just check the error log all the same.

16
  • 11
    Also note that you can use these 3 lines, and then include('fileImWorkingOn.php');. Then you can catch the syntax errors too!
    – Snap
    May 8, 2015 at 18:11
  • 18
    While I'm no SysOps, I think more people have an .htaccess file than php.ini, and these would both come before parsing, right? php_flag display_errors 1 for .htaccess Jul 9, 2015 at 21:58
  • 1
    So now that the errors get logged, where do they go? I went to /var/log/apache2 and it shows all the logs, but there is no information regarding the program I recently ran. I only get information about system restarts once every morning.
    – Michael
    May 17, 2016 at 15:14
  • 3
    E_ALL isn't sufficient to display all errors in PHP 5.3. "E_STRICT became part of E_ALL in 5.4.0" - PHP Manual You need E_ALL | E_STRICT or -1 in that version. Sep 14, 2016 at 4:12
  • 2
    Everyone has a PHP.ini, Few have a .htaccess file ... The ability to edit their PHP.ini file is another thing.. And most public servers allow for a custom php.ini file to be used..
    – Angry 84
    Nov 10, 2016 at 5:47
166

You can't catch parse errors in the same file where error output is enabled at runtime, because it parses the file before actually executing anything (and since it encounters an error during this, it won't execute anything). You'll need to change the actual server configuration so that display_errors is on and the approriate error_reporting level is used. If you don't have access to php.ini, you may be able to use .htaccess or similar, depending on the server.

This question may provide additional info.

0
161

Inside your php.ini:

display_errors = on

Then restart your web server.

5
  • 9
    +①. On my ubuntu /etc/php5/apache2/php.ini
    – m93a
    Feb 23, 2015 at 17:44
  • 7
    for restart (Debian, Ubuntu, etc.) sudo service apache2 restart Sep 1, 2015 at 13:04
  • 4
    For restart on OS X sudo apachectl -k restart.
    – Pea
    Jan 10, 2016 at 19:53
  • 5
    fun fact: you can locate your php.ini file loaded if you simply put in phpinfo(); into a blank php file. it's the 7th row down and called Loaded Configuration File Jul 24, 2016 at 4:56
  • This doesn't work for me. In fact I can call ini_get('display_errors') and it returns an empty string (meaning it is turned off). And yes I checked to make sure it is the only line in the configuration file. The setting is getting overridden somehow and I can't figure out why and it is driving me nuts. Yes, I've searched everything in /etc/php.d/ and it is not one of those files either. Yes, I restarted the web server too. No, there is nothing in the .htaccess file. I'm using PHP 7.4.6.
    – cazort
    Aug 3, 2021 at 18:07
111

To display all errors you need to:

1. Have these lines in the PHP script you're calling from the browser (typically index.php):

error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', '1');

2.(a) Make sure that this script has no syntax errors

—or—

2.(b) Set display_errors = On in your php.ini

Otherwise, it can't even run those 2 lines!

You can check for syntax errors in your script by running (at the command line):

php -l index.php

If you include the script from another PHP script then it will display syntax errors in the included script. For example:

index.php

error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', '1');

// Any syntax errors here will result in a blank screen in the browser

include 'my_script.php';

my_script.php

adjfkj // This syntax error will be displayed in the browser
2
  • All I get when doing php -l phpfilename.php is a message that says "Errors parsing sql_lab.php". It doesn't tell me what the errors are.
    – KevinHJ
    Jul 23, 2021 at 2:33
  • In addition to the blank screen it will return an Error 500 which is way more safe to measure than just no content.
    – Chris S.
    Dec 21, 2021 at 23:04
55

Some web hosting providers allow you to change PHP parameters in the .htaccess file.

You can add the following line:

php_value display_errors 1

I had the same issue as yours and this solution fixed it.

1
  • And if you are in nginx environment then add the php value to your site (sites-available) configuration under the location ~\.php directive. fastcgi_param PHP_VALUE " error_reporting=E_ALL;\n display_errors=1;"; Oct 9, 2018 at 7:25
46

Warning: the below answer is factually incorrect. Nothing has been changed in error handling, uncaught exceptions are displayed just like other errors. Suggested approach must be used with caution, because it outputs errors unconditionally, despite the display_error setting and may pose a threat by revealing the sensitive information to an outsider on a live site.

You might find all of the settings for "error reporting" or "display errors" do not appear to work in PHP 7. That is because error handling has changed. Try this instead:

try{
     // Your code
} 
catch(Error $e) {
    $trace = $e->getTrace();
    echo $e->getMessage().' in '.$e->getFile().' on line '.$e->getLine().' called from '.$trace[0]['file'].' on line '.$trace[0]['line'];
}

Or, to catch exceptions and errors in one go (this is not backward compatible with PHP 5):

try{
     // Your code
} 
catch(Throwable $e) {
    $trace = $e->getTrace();
    echo $e->getMessage().' in '.$e->getFile().' on line '.$e->getLine().' called from '.$trace[0]['file'].' on line '.$trace[0]['line'];
}
9
  • 1
    Do you mean PHP7 or PHP7.1 ? I am confused, I tried as the validated answer proposed and it works, I think you are proposing something a bit different IMHO, indeed "no backward compatibility" and if you have to modify a full PHP < 7 code and need to add try{} catch() {} code everywhere in your already defined php code, I don't even want to think the mess that's going to be..
    – vdegenne
    Jan 22, 2017 at 11:22
  • @FancyJohn, this could help: $bt = debug_backtrace(); print_r($bt);. Mar 23, 2017 at 3:25
  • @ballangddang, I ran into the issue with PHP 7.0, where the only way I could get the error to display was using the try/catch blocks and specifically catching Error. If you rewrite all requests (except maybe JavaScript, CSS, Images, etc) to the index.php file, then have the try catch block there, it makes it easier. Yes, any system that does not have a single entry point would be a major headache to update. Mar 23, 2017 at 3:28
  • 1
    Does PHP not show unhandled exceptions? Pretty sure it does? Jun 5, 2017 at 2:20
  • 1
    This looks like a bad idea. Time to use (or write) a global exception handler. Feb 5, 2019 at 14:54
35

This will work:

<?php
     error_reporting(E_ALL);
     ini_set('display_errors', 1);    
?>
1
  • October 2020: This worked for me. So easy. No messing around with .htaccess or php.ini. When you're done, just comment it out or remove it. PHP 7.4
    – Rob Moll
    Oct 23, 2020 at 14:18
35

Use:

ini_set('display_errors', 1);
ini_set('display_startup_errors', 1);
error_reporting(E_ALL);

This is the best way to write it, but a syntax error gives blank output, so use the console to check for syntax errors. The best way to debug PHP code is to use the console; run the following:

php -l phpfilename.php
0
23

Set this in your index.php file:

ini_set('display_errors', 1);
ini_set('display_startup_errors', 1);
error_reporting(E_ALL);
0
20

Create a file called php.ini in the folder where your PHP file resides.

Inside php.ini add the following code (I am giving an simple error showing code):

display_errors = on

display_startup_errors = on
20

In order to display a parse error, instead of setting display_errors in php.ini you can use a trick: use include.

Here are three pieces of code:

File: tst1.php

<?php
error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', 'On');
// Missing " and ;
echo "Testing

When running this file directly, it will show nothing, given display_errors is set to 0 in php.ini.

Now, try this:

File: tst2.php

<?php
error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', 'On');
include ("tst3.php");

File: tst3.php

<?php
// Missing " and ;
echo "Testing

Now run tst2.php which sets the error reporting, and then include tst3. You will see:

Parse error: syntax error, unexpected end of file, expecting variable (T_VARIABLE) or ${ (T_DOLLAR_OPEN_CURLY_BRACES) or {$ (T_CURLY_OPEN) in tst3.php on line 4

4
  • 1
    I've spent some time figuring this out. Why did they change php 5 behaviour?
    – Hebe
    Dec 17, 2020 at 20:41
  • 1
    This deserves more upvotes. The key in my case was to enable error reporting and defining an error handler in init0.php, and from that file include init1.php, which can include other files with errors in them. It won't work if enabling error reporting in the same file that includes other files with errors in them.
    – Magnus
    Dec 29, 2022 at 20:21
  • 1
    The approach suggested is actually correct, but the explanation was wrong. Nothing has been changed in PHP7. Neither PHP5 or PHP3 was able to parse a file with a syntax error. The problem is a parse error, not a PHP version. And the solution proposed is good for any PHP version. Feb 4, 2023 at 8:29
  • I had a very big web site running PHP5 and using the php.ini setting, all errors were visible, which explain all other answers. When I updated to PHP7, without any other changes, it was not possible to see errors. So even the solution is good for every version, the other answers are correct for older version.
    – Peter
    Feb 4, 2023 at 13:09
17

I would usually go with the following code in my plain PHP projects.

if(!defined('ENVIRONMENT')){
    define('ENVIRONMENT', 'DEVELOPMENT');
}

$base_url = null;

if (defined('ENVIRONMENT'))
{
    switch (ENVIRONMENT)
    {
        case 'DEVELOPMENT':
            $base_url = 'http://localhost/product/';
            ini_set('display_errors', 1);
            ini_set('display_startup_errors', 1);
            error_reporting(E_ALL);
            break;

        case 'PRODUCTION':
            $base_url = 'Production URL'; /* https://google.com */
            error_reporting(E_ALL);
            ini_set('display_errors', 0);
            ini_set('display_startup_errors', 0);
            ini_set('log_errors', 1); // Mechanism to log errors
            break;

        default:
            exit('The application environment is not set correctly.');
    }
}
16

If, despite following all of the above answers (or you can't edit your php.ini file), you still can't get an error message, try making a new PHP file that enables error reporting and then include the problem file. eg:

error_reporting(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', 1);
require_once('problem_file.php');

Despite having everything set properly in my php.ini file, this was the only way I could catch a namespace error. My exact scenario was:

//file1.php
namespace a\b;
class x {
    ...
}

//file2.php
namespace c\d;
use c\d\x; //Dies because it's not sure which 'x' class to use
class x {
    ...
}
2
  • 1
    No, the error reporting is not a loglevel, it is a bitfield. Using 999999 is a very bad idea, use some power-of-two minus 1, for example 2047!
    – peterh
    Jul 17, 2018 at 13:32
  • You're absolutely right, @peterh! I've changed it to E_ALL as this will enable reporting of all errors (except strict errors in php 5.4 and below).
    – jxmallett
    Jul 18, 2018 at 2:52
14

If you somehow find yourself in a situation where you can't modifiy the setting via php.ini or .htaccess you're out of luck for displaying errors when your PHP scripts contain parse errors. You'd then have to resolve to linting the files on the command line like this:

find . -name '*.php' -type f -print0 | xargs -0 -n1 -P8 php -l | grep -v "No syntax errors"

If your host is so locked down that it does not allow changing the value via php.ini or .htaccess, it may also disallow changing the value via ini_set. You can check that with the following PHP script:

<?php
if( !ini_set( 'display_errors', 1 ) ) {
  echo "display_errors cannot be set.";
} else {
  echo "changing display_errors via script is possible.";
}
1
  • find . -name '*.php' -type f -exec php -l {} \; | grep -v 'No syntax errors detected' is simpler
    – scones
    Nov 24, 2017 at 13:27
14

You can do something like below:

Set the below parameters in your main index file:

    ini_set('display_errors', 1);
    ini_set('display_startup_errors', 1);

Then based on your requirement you can choose which you want to show:

For all errors, warnings and notices:

    error_reporting(E_ALL); OR error_reporting(-1);

For all errors:

    error_reporting(E_ERROR);

For all warnings:

    error_reporting(E_WARNING);

For all notices:

    error_reporting(E_NOTICE);

For more information, check here.

1
  • What is the "main index file"? File index.html? Feb 17, 2019 at 9:26
12

You can add your own custom error handler, which can provide extra debug information. Furthermore, you can set it up to send you the information via email.

function ERR_HANDLER($errno, $errstr, $errfile, $errline){
    $msg = "<b>Something bad happened.</b> [$errno] $errstr <br><br>
    <b>File:</b> $errfile <br>
    <b>Line:</b> $errline <br>
    <pre>".json_encode(debug_backtrace(), JSON_PRETTY_PRINT)."</pre> <br>";

    echo $msg;

    return false;
}

function EXC_HANDLER($exception){
    ERR_HANDLER(0, $exception->getMessage(), $exception->getFile(), $exception->getLine());
}

function shutDownFunction() {
    $error = error_get_last();
    if ($error["type"] == 1) {
        ERR_HANDLER($error["type"], $error["message"], $error["file"], $error["line"]);
    }
}

set_error_handler ("ERR_HANDLER", E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE & ~E_STRICT & ~E_DEPRECATED);
register_shutdown_function("shutdownFunction");
set_exception_handler("EXC_HANDLER");
12

Accepted asnwer including extra options. In PHP files for in my DEVELOPMENT apache vhost (.htaccess if you can ensure it doesn't get into production):

ini_set('display_errors', '1');
ini_set('display_startup_errors', '1');
error_reporting(E_ALL);

However, this doesn't make PHP to show parse errors - the only way to show those errors is to modify your php.ini with this line:

display_errors = on

(if you don't have access to php.ini, then putting this line in .htaccess might work too):

// I've added some extra options that set E_ALL as per https://www.php.net/manual/en/errorfunc.configuration.php.
php_flag log_errors on
php_flag display_errors on
php_flag display_startup_errors on
php_value error_reporting 2147483647
php_value error_log /var/www/mywebsite.ext/logs/php.error.log
7

This code on top should work:

error_reporting(E_ALL);

However, try to edit the code on the phone in the file:

error_reporting =on
5

The best/easy/fast solution that you can use if it's a quick debugging, is to surround your code with catching exceptions. That's what I'm doing when I want to check something fast in production.

try {
    // Page code
}
catch (Exception $e) {
    echo 'Caught exception: ',  $e->getMessage(), "\n";
}
3
  • For php7, catch (Throwable $e) is better... Or another catch block underneath catch(Error $e) Aug 19, 2017 at 2:58
  • This code is actually dangerous. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES it should be used in the production environment. As it will leak the error message to anyone, not only the dev who added it . In the production environment all errors must be logged. So the developer can peek into the error log any time. An it will catch all errors, not only ones happened when the dev is refreshing the browser. Without the need of adding any code. Which makes this code not only dangerous but also useless. Feb 4, 2023 at 9:04
  • Bro, he is quick debugging not launching a website for error catching, being dangerous is irrelevant, nobody would prefer errors to show to clients instead of a blank page. And yes, we could write him a logger or check out what is he using to provide him with the right solution, but this is stackoverflow, it would take a lot of chat and interactions to know his specific needs. your common sense.
    – Xakiru
    Feb 5, 2023 at 7:45
4
    <?php
    // Turn off error reporting
    error_reporting(0);

    // Report runtime errors
    error_reporting(E_ERROR | E_WARNING | E_PARSE);

    // Report all errors
    error_reporting(E_ALL);

    // Same as error_reporting(E_ALL);
    ini_set("error_reporting", E_ALL);

    // Report all errors except E_NOTICE
    error_reporting(E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE);
    ?>

While your site is live, the php.ini file should have display_errors disabled for security reasons. However, for the development environment, display_errors can be enabled for troubleshooting.

0
3

Just write:

error_reporting(-1);
0
3

If you have Xdebug installed you can override every setting by setting:

xdebug.force_display_errors = 1;
xdebug.force_error_reporting = -1;

force_display_errors

Type: int, Default value: 0, Introduced in Xdebug >= 2.3 If this setting is set to 1 then errors will always be displayed, no matter what the setting of PHP's display_errors is.

force_error_reporting

Type: int, Default value: 0, Introduced in Xdebug >= 2.3 This setting is a bitmask, like error_reporting. This bitmask will be logically ORed with the bitmask represented by error_reporting to dermine which errors should be displayed. This setting can only be made in php.ini and allows you to force certain errors from being shown no matter what an application does with ini_set().

2

If it is on the command line, you can run php with -ddisplay_errors=1 to override the setting in php.ini:

php -ddisplay_errors=1 script.php
2

In Unix CLI, it's very practical to redirect only errors to a file:

./script 2> errors.log

From your script, either use var_dump() or equivalent as usual (both STDOUT and STDERR will receive the output), but to write only in the log file:

fwrite(STDERR, "Debug infos\n"); // Write in errors.log^

Then from another shell, for live changes:

tail -f errors.log

or simply

watch cat errors.log
1
  • How does that answer this question about PHP? Apr 22, 2020 at 14:45
1

Report all errors except E_NOTICE

error_reporting(E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE);

Display all PHP errors

error_reporting(E_ALL);  or ini_set('error_reporting', E_ALL);

Turn off all error reporting

error_reporting(0);
0

If you are on a SharedHosting plan (like on hostgator)... simply adding

php_flag display_errors 1

into a .htaccess file and uploading it to the remote folder may not yield the actual warnings/errors that were generated on the server.

What you will also need to do is edit the php.ini

This is how you do it via cPanel (tested on hostgator shared hosting plan)

After logging into your cPanel, search for MultiPHP INI Editor. It is usually found under the SOFTWARE section in your cPanel list of items.

On the MultiPHP INI Editor page ...you can stay on the basic mode tab and just check the button on the line that says display_errors. Then click the Apply button to save.

enter image description here

IMPORTANT: Just remember to turn it back off when you are done debugging; because this is not recommended for public servers.

0

As it is not clear what OS you are on these are my 2 Windows cents. If you are using XAMPP you need to manually create the logs folder under C:\xampp\php. Not your fault, ApacheFriends ommitted this.

To read and follow this file do.

Get-Content c:\xampp\php\logs\php_error_log -Wait

To do this in VSCode create a task in .vscode\tasks.json

{ 
  // See https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=733558 
  // for the documentation about the tasks.json format 
  "version": "2.0.0", 
  "tasks": [ 
    { 
      "label": "Monitor php errors", 
      "type": "shell", 
      "command": "Get-Content -Wait c:\\xampp\\php\\logs\\php_error_log", 
      "runOptions": { 
        "runOn": "folderOpen" 
      } 
    } 
  ] 

and have it run on folder load.

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