29

I'm on a foreign linux system and need to determine the user that apache runs on (and so does php).

The aim: I need to get the owner of the script (this is no problem as I can use SplFileInfo) and compare it to the owner of the apache process.

I'm open to any alternative proposals.

Regards, Mario

Edit: Additional info:

The script is a thumbnail generator, that uses an XML file to generate thumbs from larger images. The script needs to create folders and write files. As I cannot influence the php configuration and I do not have any shell access, this has to be done very silently. The creation process stopps via exception and sends a mail on failue. As most of php's function cannot throw exceptions on failue, I need some manual checks to determine the environment I'm in. Therefore I need the apache user to compare it to some directory or fileowner.

2
  • As option you can simply use /tmp, that is writeable for everyone.
    – Anonymous
    Apr 30, 2009 at 8:50
  • Thats not useful for our case, as we cannot serve any generated images from outside the docroot. Apr 30, 2009 at 11:42

5 Answers 5

56

You can call the php exec function to execute whoami:

<?php echo exec('whoami'); ?>
5
  • thanx grant! thanx to the anon., both methods provided here are very well suited. I will use grant's method, as I cannot assert that the posix function are available. Apr 30, 2009 at 8:44
  • 1
    exec() won't work if safe_mode is enabled and whoami is outside of safe_mode_exec_dir.
    – Anonymous
    Apr 30, 2009 at 8:48
  • absolutely correct, but for my target environment this is the best solution. (no safe_mode ;)) Apr 30, 2009 at 8:50
  • This works for linux and unix, I haven't tested it for windows though. Mar 5, 2017 at 13:58
  • I just tested this on Windows (XAMPP) and surprisingly it works, returning in my case msedgewin10\ieuser which is machine_name\user_name. I then went and tried typing on a simple DOS prompt whoami and it worked the same. Cool.
    – pgr
    Mar 8, 2017 at 20:15
8

see posix_getuid() and posix_getpwuid()

5

Some complicated answers here.

This works for me:

$user = getenv('APACHE_RUN_USER');

Not sure if this is just a new thing that been added to apache since this question was asked but it's definitely there now.

1
  • In my case, it didn't work. It just returned an empty string. Mar 5, 2017 at 13:54
1

phpinfo will dump a lot of system information. For apache2 installs, there is a section that displays the apache user and group ids. Try creating a php script that just has one line, a call to phpinfo(), and open it in your web browser.

2
  • Thats not the aim ;) I know how to get the user via php info ... i need to aquire the names as strings from within a script. Apr 30, 2009 at 8:32
  • ... and parsing the phpinfo(INFO_MODULES) is NOT an alternative ;) Apr 30, 2009 at 8:33
0

Some php script must be run on apache user (cli), whoami is not appropriate in that case. Here is my solution :

$output = exec('apachectl -S 2>/dev/null | grep User');
$apacheUser = preg_match('/name="([^"]+)"/', $output, $match) ? $match[1] : 'www-data';

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