I can't find a way to run or debug php on Visual studio code, Does anyone know how?
-
@WaiHaLee code.visualstudio.com– mkvlrnMay 3, 2015 at 20:49
-
2I agree with you that the documentation is very poor, hard to understand and most answer are incomplete so we have to read dozen of answers to figure out what we are doing wrong. ASP.NET debugging was 100 times easier to setup (for C# though). So was Web Matrix debugging (for PHP).– Phil1970Dec 24, 2017 at 3:09
-
I think that this tutorial might be useful: forevolve.com/en/articles/2016/08/04/…. I have not tried it yet. I don't understand why it is so complicate to set up VS Code for debugging as it was much simpler in Visual Studio and in Web Matrix.– Phil1970Dec 24, 2017 at 3:51
-
Hey You can follow the guide: cloudways.com/blog/php-debug-with-xdebug– Shahroze NawazApr 4, 2019 at 12:52
-
That guide definitely works as I've just succeeded using it jonathansblog.co.uk/…– 8ctopusApr 8, 2020 at 5:16
11 Answers
Debugging PHP with VSCode using the vscode-php-debug extension
VSCode can now support debugging PHP projects through the marketplace extension vscode-php-debug.
This extension uses XDebug in the background, and allows you to use breakpoints, watches, stack traces and the like:
Installation is straightforward from within VSCode: Summon the command line with F1 and then type ext install php-debug
-
2Can I debug the PHP code running on a server, using my local VSC installation, with this?– SushruthJan 27, 2016 at 17:07
-
1It should work, but I didn't test it. Check out section "Remote Host Debugging" of the Readme Jan 28, 2016 at 10:18
-
7Installation may be straightforward. Configuration and actually getting it working is anything but that. Mar 13, 2016 at 23:43
-
16I am the author of this extension, hit me up if you have any questions :) Jun 22, 2016 at 11:30
-
1While this answer is true, please notice that the one by John Kaster includes this one, as the link he provides cover all setup steps. Sep 21, 2016 at 9:21
As far as I read about it today, you can't debug anything else than node.js, JavaScript and TypeScript at the moment, but they said they want to add new languages which you can debug. The editor is still in development. Nevertheless, I don't think there will be a php debugger in the future since php is serverside, so you can't debug it on your client alone.
If you want to debug php, I can recommend xDebug.
Updated:
Now, it is possible to debug with VS code. You need to install XDebug and php-debug extension for VScode.
-
15This answer is quite weird but I'll try to clarify. xDebug is one of the options to debug PHP, it runs on your server as a PHP extension. Which makes one side of the story. The other side is the xDebug client. There are clients for some editors like for Sublime Text for instance. These allow you to set breakpoints on your code that will be hit when PHP is processing the request. So here what we would need would be a xDebug client for VSCode. Hope this makes it more clear.– pmmagaMay 21, 2015 at 15:27
-
3And once one has done that, what he have to do so that pressing F5 actually start a server and open the page for debugging. This is the hardest thing to understand but most answer don't even tell us anything about that. I have installed PHP (via IIS Web Platform Installer), I have modified my PHP.ini file, I have copied the XDebug DLL but at that point, It was still not working.– Phil1970Dec 24, 2017 at 3:13
-
@Phil1970, I assume that your explanation is awesome )) but... How come it is still not working?! I set all this up with the instructions with your perfect explanation and this didn't work also. AND I remembered that I need to start PHP file because the PHP is executable is not running without activation a script. VS Code doesn't do that. It is up to you. I assume that in your case you should "hook" a debugger to the desired PHP script and start excecution of that script. Mar 4, 2023 at 8:46
There is now a handy guide for configuring PHP debugging in Visual Studio Code at http://blogs.msdn.com/b/nicktrog/archive/2016/02/11/configuring-visual-studio-code-for-php-development.aspx
From the link, the steps are:
- Download and install Visual Studio Code
- Configure PHP linting in user settings
- Download and install the PHP Debug extension from the Visual Studio Marketplace
- Configure the PHP Debug extension for XDebug
Note there are specific details in the linked article, including the PHP values for your VS Code user config, and so on.
-
I don't understand how
PHP linting
is related to debugging... And when step 4 is done, what we have to do to start debugging the code has pressingF5
does not start anything...– Phil1970Dec 24, 2017 at 2:40 -
@Phil1970 PHP Linting could well have changed since I posted this. I do remember that PHP 7.x was required as a minimum for linting to work correctly, and it may be that VS Code has better plugin support for it now. Jan 3, 2018 at 20:34
-
2The blog post doesn't explain how to configure xdebug links to open in vscode, but it is explained here: stackoverflow.com/questions/52935738/… Jan 8, 2019 at 18:45
If you don't want to install xDebug or other extensions and just want to run a PHP file without debugging, you can accomplish this using build tasks.
Using Build Tasks (No extensions required)
First open the command palette (Ctrl+Shift+P in Windows, ⌘+Shift+P in Mac), and select "Tasks:Open User Tasks". Now copy my configuration below into your tasks.json file. This creates user-level tasks which can be used any time and in any workspace.
{
"version": "2.0.0",
"tasks": [
{
"label": "Start Server",
"type": "shell",
"command": "php -S localhost:8080 -t ${fileDirname}",
"isBackground": true,
"group": "build",
"problemMatcher": []
},
{
"label": "Run In Browser",
"type": "shell",
"command": "open http://localhost:8080/${fileBasename}",
"windows": {
"command": "explorer 'http://localhost:8080/${fileBasename}'"
},
"group": "build",
"problemMatcher": []
},
{
"label": "Run In Terminal",
"type": "shell",
"command": "php ${file}",
"group": "none",
"problemMatcher": []
}
]
}
If you want to run your php file in the terminal, open the command palette and select "Tasks: Run Task" followed by "Run In Terminal".
If you want to run your code on a webserver which serves a response to a web browser, open the command palette and select "Tasks: Run Task" followed by "Start Server" to run PHP's built-in server, then "Run In Browser" to run the currently open file from your browser.
Note that if you already have a webserver running, you can remove the Start Server
task and update the localhost:8080
part to point to whatever URL you are using.
Using PHP Debug
Note: This section was in my original answer. I originally thought that it works without PHP Debug but it looks like PHP Debug actually exposes the php
type in the launch configuration. There is no reason to use it over the build task method described above. I'm keeping it here in case it is useful.
Copy the following configuration into your user settings:
{
"launch": {
"version": "0.2.0",
"configurations": [
{
"type": "php",
"request": "launch",
"name": "Run using PHP executable",
"program": "${file}",
"runtimeExecutable": "/usr/bin/php"
}
]
}
// all your other user settings...
}
This creates a global launch configuration that you can use on any PHP file. Note the runtimeExecutable
option. You will need to update this with the path to the PHP executable on your machine. After you copy the configuration above, whenever you have a PHP file open, you can press the F5 key to run the PHP code and have the output displayed in the vscode terminal.
-
-
agreed. I also suggest to create a tasks.json inside the .vscode folder and use ${workspaceFolder} instead of ${fileBasename} for the php start server task– R...Feb 12, 2023 at 20:44
already their is enough help full answers but if you want to see the process then
[ click here ]
Steps in Short
- download php debug plugin [ https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=felixfbecker.php-debug ]
- download xDebug.dll [ https://xdebug.org/wizard.php ]
- move xdebug file to [ ?? / php / ext / here ]
update php.ini file with following lines :
[XDebug] xdebug.remote_enable = 1 xdebug.remote_autostart = 1 zend_extension=path/to/xdebug
[ good to go ]
- make sure that you have restarted your local server
-
Could you provide more information on how to start the server. I was assuming that pressing F5 to debug an application would automatically start the server (or show an appropriate message if something was wrong). By the way, I don't know if the video has the required information but it is painful to listen.– Phil1970Dec 24, 2017 at 2:48
It's worth noting that you must open project folder in Visual Studio Code for the debugger to work. I lost few hours to make it work while having only individual file opened in the editor.
Issue explained here
-
1Ha ha I just read this after spending hours trying to get it to work and noticed it just started to work when I opened a folder instead!! Mar 4, 2018 at 6:23
If you are using Ubuntu 16.04 and php7 you can install xdebug with below command:
sudo apt-get install php-xdebug
You can find the full configuration process here.
If you are using windows, you can download xdebug from xdebug.org.
And start debugging in VS-code with php-debug extension.
-
As many other answer, you don't give much information on what to do after that so that the server and a web browser would start on the specified page.– Phil1970Dec 24, 2017 at 3:17
To debug php with vscode,you need these things:
- vscode with php debuge plugin(XDebug) installed;
- php with XDebug.so/XDebug.dll downloaded and configured;
- a web server,such as apache/nginx or just nothing(use the php built-in server)
you can gently walk through step 1 and 2,by following the vscode official guide.It is fully recommended to use XDebug installation wizard to verify your XDebug configuration.
If you want to debug without a standalone web server,the php built-in maybe a choice.Start the built-in server by php -S localhost:port -t path/to/your/project
command,setting your project dir as document root.You can refer to this post for more details.
-
-
I was thinking it was possible to use IIS to run PHP... Do I have to type the above command each time I want to debug? To me, it seems stupid that F5 would not start the server.– Phil1970Dec 24, 2017 at 2:51
-
@MaciejJureczko Even though you might think the question was answered 2 years ago, still today the documentation is poor and information is very hard to find on the web for someone that has only used ASP.NET + Visual Studio and PHP + Web Matrix in the past. Most other answer don't talk about starting web server.– Phil1970Dec 24, 2017 at 3:05
-
@Archman Do we have to start the server every time and if so, should we start it before we press F5 to start debugging. To me, it seems weird that starting debugging won't start the server.– Phil1970Dec 24, 2017 at 3:20
-
@Phil1970 We do not need to restart the server every time, F5 means start debugging, server is running all the time( F5 will not start any server).– ArchmanDec 27, 2017 at 6:25
XDebug changed some configuration settings.
Old settings:
xdebug.remote_enable = 1
xdebug.remote_autostart = 1
xdebug.remote_port = 9000
New settings:
xdebug.mode=debug
xdebug.start_with_request=yes
xdebug.client_port=9000
So you should paste the latter in php.ini file. More info: XDebug Changed Configuration Settings
The best solution for me was to add a key binding to run PHP code directly in the terminal
To do so you just need to download terminal-command-keys
from VS code extensions marketplace:
Then got to File>Preferences>Keyboard Shortcuts and click on the following icon at the upper right corner:
It will open up the keybindings.json
file
Add the following settings
[
{
"key": "ctrl+s",
"command":"terminalCommandKeys.run",
"when": "editorLangId == php",
"args": {
"cmd":"php ${file}",
"newTerminal":true,
"saveAllfiles": true,
"showTerminal": true,
}
}
]
key is the shortcut to run your PHP file (I use ctrl+s) you can change it as you wish
when to run different commands for different file types (I set it for PHP files only) vscode's "when" clauses
See the full settings documentation from here
That's it, I hope it helps.
For running simple php website below are the two short steps
From terminal run the command
php -S localhost:8080
If the command is sucessfull, you will below message (this from ubuntu and same applies from windows as well)
PHP 7.4.3-4ubuntu2.19 Development Server (http://localhost:8080) started