While tinkering for an answer to this question, I found that debug_backtrace() doesn't trace beyond the function registered to register_shutdown_function(), when called from within it.

This was mentioned in this comment for register_shutdown_function() in the PHP docs, stating:

You may get the idea to call debug_backtrace or debug_print_backtrace from inside a shutdown function, to trace where a fatal error occurred. Unfortunately, these functions will not work inside a shutdown function.

Explained with a bit more detail, comments on this answer state:

Doesn't work. The shutdown function occurs after the stack has unwinded. There is no stack information to dump.

Is there any way to circumvent this, forcing PHP to hold the stack trace until the process has terminated altogether, or should we accept it as a given due to PHP internals?

link|improve this question

feedback

3 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

Is there any way to circumvent this, forcing PHP to hold the stack trace

That's rather meaningless, when the registered function is invoked, all your defined functions have returned or been cleared down from the stack.

If you need to know where your code exited, then you need to instrument your code.

link|improve this answer
1  
Thanks @symcbean - Given all other functions in a given execution have returned, and we've bubbled back up to global scope, of course; however, the part where incomplete function calls are being cleared from the stack (given exit is called at some arbitrary depth of nested calls) is what I find unfortunate, and not meaningless. I never use exit for execution control, favoring exceptions to handle my error logic; this was more of an academic inquiry, rather than real-world. Still though, it makes sense in my mind that the stack should be preserved until the process is killed completely. – Bracketworks Aug 30 '11 at 13:55
Than what would happen when your registered shutdown function returned? – symcbean Aug 30 '11 at 15:57
Touche, sir; I just thought PHP would (should) keep the stack at script termination, check for handlers, execute handlers, wash-rinse-repeat until the queue is empty, and then end execution. – Bracketworks Sep 11 '11 at 22:15
1  
You can use error_get_last to find where the error was raised, but it won't give you the stack. – Paul Jan 20 at 5:50
feedback

This is a very expensive solution. I never used register_tick_function() or tick and I'm not sure if it works as expected.

declare(ticks=1);

function tick_handler() {
    global $backtrace;
    $backtrace = debug_backtrace();
}
register_tick_function('tick_handler');



function shutdown() {
    global $backtrace;
    // do check if $backtrace contains a fatal error...
    var_dump($backtrace);
}
register_shutdown_function('shutdown');
link|improve this answer
1  
Thanks @powtac - Great solution, however it didn't work. I certainly see where you were going with that. I fooled with it a bit, but with no success yet. – Bracketworks Aug 30 '11 at 13:50
@Bracketworks Ok, let me know if it will work once! – powtac Aug 30 '11 at 16:50
feedback

From my experience, the shutdown function starts with a clean stack, and it has no access to the "original" stack (as it no longer exists at that point).

Unfortunately, there is no way to save that original stack.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.