60

I'm just experimenting with PHP and shell_exec on my Linux server. It's a really cool function to use and I am really enjoying it so far. Is there a way to view the live output that is going on while the command is running?

For example, if ping stackoverflow.com was run, while it is pinging the target address, every time it pings, show the results with PHP? Is that possible?

I would love to see the live update of the buffer as it's running. Maybe it's not possible but it sure would be nice.

This is the code I am trying and every way I have tried it always displays the results after the command is finished.

<?php

  $cmd = 'ping -c 10 127.0.0.1';

  $output = shell_exec($cmd);

  echo "<pre>$output</pre>";

?>

I've tried putting the echo part in a loop but still no luck. Anyone have any suggestions on making it show the live output to the screen instead of waiting until the command is complete?

I've tried exec, shell_exec, system, and passthru. Everyone of them displays the content after it's finished. Unless I'm using the wrong syntax or I'm not setting up the loop correctly.

6
  • Why not execute the file in a shell for a start? Nov 20, 2013 at 21:14
  • Use passthru() instead of shell_exec()
    – Mike B
    Nov 20, 2013 at 21:14
  • I will research passthru right now. Nov 20, 2013 at 21:16
  • 1
    popen and fread
    – Marc B
    Nov 20, 2013 at 21:16
  • Having no luck figuring out the syntax for passthru() to work. Nov 20, 2013 at 22:03

3 Answers 3

121

To read the output of a process, popen() is the way to go. Your script will run in parallel with the program and you can interact with it by reading and writing it's output/input as if it was a file.

But if you just want to dump it's result straight to the user you can cut to the chase and use passthru():

echo '<pre>';
passthru($cmd);
echo '</pre>';

If you want to display the output at run time as the program goes, you can do this:

while (@ ob_end_flush()); // end all output buffers if any

$proc = popen($cmd, 'r');
echo '<pre>';
while (!feof($proc))
{
    echo fread($proc, 4096);
    @ flush();
}
echo '</pre>';

This code should run the command and push the output straight to the end user at run time.

More useful information

Note that if you are using sessions then having one of those running will prevent the user from loading other pages, as sessions enforce that concurrent requests cannot happen. To prevent this from being a problem, call session_write_close() before the loop.

If your server is behind a nginx gateway, then the nginx buffering may be disruptive to the desired behavior. Set the header header('X-Accel-Buffering: no'); to hint nginx that it shouldn't do that. As headers are sent first, this has to be called in the beginning of the script, before any data is sent.

21
  • 1
    I actually found a code when I was researching that was similar to that but i must have messed it up. I tried for about an hour to get it to work. Thank you that's exactly what I wanted that works perfect. Nov 21, 2013 at 0:22
  • 2
    Yeah, the trick is to enforce that no buffering will happen at all. This code makes sure of that. Usually PHP will only flush output when it accumulates at least 4KB of data.
    – Havenard
    Nov 21, 2013 at 0:29
  • 2
    When capturing output from a python process, you'll need to disable output buffering: python -u /path/to/watch ... or PYTHONUNBUFFERED=1 watch ...
    – Umair Ayub
    Jan 21, 2018 at 10:05
  • 1
    @ErikvandeVen In that case you might want to take a look into mkfifo().
    – Havenard
    Jul 17, 2018 at 14:43
  • 4
    If you're in Nginx, you should also add header('X-Accel-Buffering: no'); to make sure gzip and fastcgi_buffering are off for that individual response. I was wondering why this code didn't work, and that was why. Jul 18, 2019 at 19:52
26

First of all, thanks Havenard for your snippet - it helped a lot!

A slightly modified version of Havenard's code which i found useful.

<?php
/**
 * Execute the given command by displaying console output live to the user.
 *  @param  string  cmd          :  command to be executed
 *  @return array   exit_status  :  exit status of the executed command
 *                  output       :  console output of the executed command
 */
function liveExecuteCommand($cmd)
{

    while (@ ob_end_flush()); // end all output buffers if any

    $proc = popen("$cmd 2>&1 ; echo Exit status : $?", 'r');

    $live_output     = "";
    $complete_output = "";

    while (!feof($proc))
    {
        $live_output     = fread($proc, 4096);
        $complete_output = $complete_output . $live_output;
        echo "$live_output";
        @ flush();
    }

    pclose($proc);

    // get exit status
    preg_match('/[0-9]+$/', $complete_output, $matches);

    // return exit status and intended output
    return array (
                    'exit_status'  => intval($matches[0]),
                    'output'       => str_replace("Exit status : " . $matches[0], '', $complete_output)
                 );
}
?>

Sample Usage :

$result = liveExecuteCommand('ls -la');

if($result['exit_status'] === 0){
   // do something if command execution succeeds
} else {
    // do something on failure
}
8
  • Would something like this work for an entire .sh script? I want to get the immediate feedback of a .sh script called from PHP? See my question here: stackoverflow.com/questions/34999905/…
    – DevelumPHP
    Jan 25, 2016 at 22:01
  • It would work. Something like : liveExecuteCommand("sh /path/to/script.sh");
    – Amith
    Jan 28, 2016 at 15:24
  • 1
    fantastic ... exactly what I was looking for.
    – frabjous
    Sep 11, 2016 at 13:48
  • one small suggestion though: throw an intval( ... ) on the exit_status to return it as an integer rather than a string.
    – frabjous
    Sep 11, 2016 at 14:01
  • 1
    Very usefull. Please not that you should not write your shell command with a trailing semicolon, otherwise the exit_status will always be 0.
    – 4wk_
    May 23, 2017 at 15:46
7

If you're willing to download a dependency, Symfony's processor component does this. I found the interface to working with this cleaner than reinventing anything myself with popen() or passthru().

This was provided by the Symfony documentation:

You can also use the Process class with the foreach construct to get the output while it is generated. By default, the loop waits for new output before going to the next iteration:

$process = new Process('ls -lsa');
$process->start();

foreach ($process as $type => $data) {
    if ($process::OUT === $type) {
        echo "\nRead from stdout: ".$data;
    } else { // $process::ERR === $type
        echo "\nRead from stderr: ".$data;
    }
}

As a warning, I've run into some problems PHP and Nginx trying to buffer the output before sending it to the browser. You can disable output buffering in PHP by turning it off in php.ini: output_buffering = off. There's apparently a way to disable it in Nginx, but I ended up using the PHP built in server for my testing to avoid the hassle.

I put up a full example of this on Gitlab: https://gitlab.com/hpierce1102/web-shell-output-streaming

1
  • 1
    Yes, in Nginx you should also do header('X-Accel-Buffering: no'); to make sure gzip and fastcgi_buffering are off for that individual response, instead of turning it off for all requests. Took me too long to figure that out. Jul 18, 2019 at 19:50

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