I ran phpinfo()
and the error_log directive simply says error_log
. What file is that referring to? i.e. what would the full path to the error_log be?
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The canonical is Where does PHP store the error log? (PHP 5, Apache, FastCGI, and cPanel) (despite the over-specific title).– Peter MortensenSep 26, 2021 at 21:52
4 Answers
Quote from the documentation:
error_log string
Name of the file where script errors should be logged. The file should be writable by the web server's user. If the special value syslog is used, the errors are sent to the system logger instead. On Unix, this means syslog(3) and on Windows NT it means the event log. The system logger is not supported on Windows 95. See also: syslog(). If this directive is not set, errors are sent to the SAPI error logger. For example, it is an error log in Apache or stderr in CLI.
So, when the value is not set (which is the default) it will be sent to the parent error logger, which is apache (if run via it) or stderr
if you run the script on the command line.
If you use the script via apache you will have to look at the apache error log, usually in /var/log/apache
or /var/log/httpd
, depending on your distribution. You can check the apache configuration file for the exact location.
Edit:
I just noticed I misread your question, I guess you mean error_log
has the actual value error_log
?
I just did some testing. When I set error_log
to a value like php_errors.log
PHP still writes the error messages to the apache error log. It behaves as if the value was empty. When I set the value to a full path (e.g. /tmp/php_errors.log
) then it writes the errors to the specified file.
So I guess in your case it writes the errors to the apache error log file.
Of course you can set your own log file be adding
ini_set("error_log", "/tmp/php_errors.log");
to your PHP files where you need it (if it hasn't been disabled by an administrator).
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there's no
/apache
in/var/log
. but there is anerror_log
in/usr/local/apache/logs
but it doesn't seem to show any PHP errors. when i run my PHP page I'm getting a blank screen and i want to know the syntax error.display_errors
is turned off inphp.ini
.– RyanApr 25, 2014 at 7:09 -
you should be able to turn on
display_errors
in your php file itself. Just addini_set("display_errors", 1);
at the beginning. Apr 25, 2014 at 7:14 -
I believe that
ini_set("display_errors", 1);
tells PHP to echo error messages to the screen via the output HTML. Jul 3, 2021 at 13:35 -
Another location is
/var/log/apache2
(extra "2") (observed on a fairly standard LAMP installation on Ubuntu MATE 20.04 (Focal Fossa))). Sep 18, 2021 at 16:53
When the value simply says error_log
(or error_log = error_log
in your php.ini
file), that means the errors will be written to a file called error_log
in the same directory that the error occurs.
So, if you have a file called index.php
in /home/user/public_html/ that throws an error, the error will be written to: /home/user/public_html/error_log.
If you have file called resize.php
in /home/user/public_html/admin/images/ that throws an error, then the errors will be written to: /home/user/public_html/admin/images/error_log
Source: Display and log errors for PHP
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It is probably not wise to keep error_log = error_log, because you don't want random people reading your error_log by visiting your website foobar.com/admin/images/error_log. this is a security concern. (unless you set your server settings to not serve error_log files, however)– relipseApr 9 at 22:55
On Windows 10, IIS 10.0.18362.1, I set this in file php\php.ini
:
error_log = "C:\tmp\php_errors.log"
or
error_log = C:\tmp\php_errors.log
or
error_log = \tmp\php_errors.log
phpinfo() shows:
error_log C:\tmp\php_errors.log or \tmp\php_errors.log
Sometimes directly, but always after iisreset
(recycling the application pool).
That is where the file is saved.
Without pad: error_log = php_errors.log
it will be written where the error occurs. It has already been mentioned.
Open your php.ini file.
Check the path against error_log.
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This should not have gotten downvoted, because this is proper usage as intended. People should use the tools provided the way they were intended and only spin their own solution up if it is inaccessible or not supplied. There's too many people on this site that assume that just because it didn't solve their specific issue (and all of it's related but unreported issues) that it's automatically wrong. This is not wrong, and if it doesn't work, then your server is set up poorly, which is your real problem.– mopsydOct 27, 2017 at 1:25
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I would add though that logs can also be defined in the apache.conf or vhost.conf as well.– mopsydOct 27, 2017 at 1:27
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1I agree with voting this down for the simple reason that it doesn't explain anything clearly. Jul 3, 2021 at 13:36
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What do you mean "Check the path against error_log." (seems incomprehensible)? Can you elaborate? Please respond by editing (changing) your answer, not here in comments (without "Edit:", "Update:", or similar - the answer should appear as if it was written today). Sep 18, 2021 at 16:49