Command line options
The list of command line options provided by the PHP binary can be queried at any time by running PHP with the -h switch:
Usage: php [options] [-f] <file> [--] [args...] php [options] -r <code> [--] [args...] php [options] [-B <begin_code>] -R <code> [-E <end_code>] [--] [args...] php [options] [-B <begin_code>] -F <file> [-E <end_code>] [--] [args...] php [options] -- [args...] php [options] -a -a Run interactively -c <path>|<file> Look for php.ini file in this directory -n No php.ini file will be used -d foo[=bar] Define INI entry foo with value 'bar' -e Generate extended information for debugger/profiler -f <file> Parse and execute <file>. -h This help -i PHP information -l Syntax check only (lint) -m Show compiled in modules -r <code> Run PHP <code> without using script tags <?..?> -B <begin_code> Run PHP <begin_code> before processing input lines -R <code> Run PHP <code> for every input line -F <file> Parse and execute <file> for every input line -E <end_code> Run PHP <end_code> after processing all input lines -H Hide any passed arguments from external tools. -S <addr>:<port> Run with built-in web server. -t <docroot> Specify document root <docroot> for built-in web server. -s Output HTML syntax highlighted source. -v Version number -w Output source with stripped comments and whitespace. -z <file> Load Zend extension <file>. args... Arguments passed to script. Use -- args when first argument starts with - or script is read from stdin --ini Show configuration file names --rf <name> Show information about function <name>. --rc <name> Show information about class <name>. --re <name> Show information about extension <name>. --rz <name> Show information about Zend extension <name>. --ri <name> Show configuration for extension <name>.
Option | Long Option | Description |
---|---|---|
-a | --interactive |
Run PHP interactively. For more information, see the Interactive shell section. |
-b | --bindpath |
Bind Path for external FASTCGI Server mode (CGI only). |
-C | --no-chdir |
Do not chdir to the script's directory (CGI only). |
-q | --no-header |
Quiet-mode. Suppress HTTP header output (CGI only). |
-T | --timing |
Measure execution time of script repeated count times (CGI only). |
-c | --php-ini |
Specifies either a directory in which to look for php.ini, or a custom INI file (which does not need to be named php.ini), e.g.: $ php -c /custom/directory/ my_script.php $ php -c /custom/directory/custom-file.ini my_script.php If this option is not specified, php.ini is searched for in the default locations. |
-n | --no-php-ini |
Ignore php.ini completely. |
-d | --define |
Set a custom value for any of the configuration directives allowed in php.ini. The syntax is: -d configuration_directive[=value] # Omitting the value part will set the given configuration directive to "1" $ php -d max_execution_time -r '$foo = ini_get("max_execution_time"); var_dump($foo);' string(1) "1" # Passing an empty value part will set the configuration directive to "" php -d max_execution_time= -r '$foo = ini_get("max_execution_time"); var_dump($foo);' string(0) "" # The configuration directive will be set to anything passed after the '=' character $ php -d max_execution_time=20 -r '$foo = ini_get("max_execution_time"); var_dump($foo);' string(2) "20" $ php -d max_execution_time=doesntmakesense -r '$foo = ini_get("max_execution_time"); var_dump($foo);' string(15) "doesntmakesense" |
-e | --profile-info |
Activate the extended information mode, to be used by a debugger/profiler. |
-f | --file |
Parse and execute the specified file. The -f is optional and may be omitted - providing just the filename to execute is sufficient.
|
-h and -? | --help and --usage | Output a list of command line options with one line descriptions of what they do. |
-i | --info | Calls phpinfo(), and prints out the results. If PHP is not working correctly, it is advisable to use the command php -i and see whether any error messages are printed out before or in place of the information tables. Beware that when using the CGI mode the output is in HTML and therefore very large. |
-l | --syntax-check |
Provides a convenient way to perform only a syntax check on the given PHP code. On success, the text No syntax errors detected in <filename> is written to standard output and the shell return code is 0. On failure, the text Errors parsing <filename> in addition to the internal parser error message is written to standard output and the shell return code is set to -1. This option won't find fatal errors (like undefined functions). Use the -f to test for fatal errors too.
|
-m | --modules |
Example #1 Printing built in (and loaded) PHP and Zend modules $ php -m [PHP Modules] xml tokenizer standard session posix pcre overload mysql mbstring ctype [Zend Modules] |
-r | --run |
Allows execution of PHP included directly on the command line. The PHP start and end tags (<?php and ?>) are not needed and will cause a parse error if present.
|
-B | --process-begin |
PHP code to execute before processing stdin. Added in PHP 5. |
-R | --process-code |
PHP code to execute for every input line. Added in PHP 5. There are two special variables available in this mode: $argn and $argi. $argn will contain the line PHP is processing at that moment, while $argi will contain the line number. |
-F | --process-file |
PHP file to execute for every input line. Added in PHP 5. |
-E | --process-end |
PHP code to execute after processing the input. Added in PHP 5. Example #4 Using the -B , -R and -E options to count the number of lines of a project. $ find my_proj | php -B '$l=0;' -R '$l += count(@file($argn));' -E 'echo "Total Lines: $l\n";' Total Lines: 37328 |
-S | --server |
Starts built-in web server. Available as of PHP 5.4.0. |
-t | --docroot | Specifies document root for built-in web server. Available as of PHP 5.4.0. |
-s | --syntax-highlight and --syntax-highlighting |
Display colour syntax highlighted source. This option uses the internal mechanism to parse the file and writes an HTML highlighted version of it to standard output. Note that all it does is generate a block of <code> [...] </code> HTML tags, no HTML headers.
|
-v | --version |
Example #5 Using -v to get the SAPI name and the version of PHP and Zend $ php -v PHP 5.3.1 (cli) (built: Dec 11 2009 19:55:07) Copyright (c) 1997-2009 The PHP Group Zend Engine v2.3.0, Copyright (c) 1998-2009 Zend Technologies |
-w | --strip |
Display source with comments and whitespace stripped.
|
-z | --zend-extension |
Load Zend extension. If only a filename is given, PHP tries to load this extension from the current default library path on your system (usually /etc/ld.so.conf on Linux systems, for example). Passing a filename with an absolute path will not use the system's library search path. A relative filename including directory information will tell PHP to try loading the extension relative to the current directory. |
--ini |
Show configuration file names and scanned directories. Available as of PHP 5.2.3. Example #6 --ini example $ php --ini Configuration File (php.ini) Path: /usr/dev/php/5.2/lib Loaded Configuration File: /usr/dev/php/5.2/lib/php.ini Scan for additional .ini files in: (none) Additional .ini files parsed: (none) |
|
--rf | --rfunction |
Show information about the given function or class method (e.g. number and name of the parameters). Available as of PHP 5.1.2. This option is only available if PHP was compiled with Reflection support.
Example #7 basic --rf usage $ php --rf var_dump Function [ <internal> public function var_dump ] { - Parameters [2] { Parameter #0 [ <required> $var ] Parameter #1 [ <optional> $... ] } } |
--rc | --rclass |
Show information about the given class (list of constants, properties and methods). Available as of PHP 5.1.2. This option is only available if PHP was compiled with Reflection support.
Example #8 --rc example $ php --rc Directory Class [ <internal:standard> class Directory ] { - Constants [0] { } - Static properties [0] { } - Static methods [0] { } - Properties [0] { } - Methods [3] { Method [ <internal> public method close ] { } Method [ <internal> public method rewind ] { } Method [ <internal> public method read ] { } } } |
--re | --rextension |
Show information about the given extension (list of php.ini options, defined functions, constants and classes). Available as of PHP 5.1.2. This option is only available if PHP was compiled with Reflection support.
Example #9 --re example $ php --re json Extension [ <persistent> extension #19 json version 1.2.1 ] { - Functions { Function [ <internal> function json_encode ] { } Function [ <internal> function json_decode ] { } } } |
--rz | --rzendextension |
Show the configuration information for the given Zend extension (the same information that is returned by phpinfo()). Available as of PHP 5.4.0. |
--ri | --rextinfo |
Show the configuration information for the given extension (the same information that is returned by phpinfo()). Available as of PHP 5.2.2. The core configuration information is available using "main" as extension name.
Example #10 --ri example $ php --ri date date date/time support => enabled "Olson" Timezone Database Version => 2009.20 Timezone Database => internal Default timezone => Europe/Oslo Directive => Local Value => Master Value date.timezone => Europe/Oslo => Europe/Oslo date.default_latitude => 59.930972 => 59.930972 date.default_longitude => 10.776699 => 10.776699 date.sunset_zenith => 90.583333 => 90.583333 date.sunrise_zenith => 90.583333 => 90.583333 |
Note:
Options -rBRFEH, --ini and --r[fcezi] are available only in CLI.
Коментарии
If we start the php's built in webserver (PHP v5.4 onwards) with:
php -S localhost:8000 -t htdocs
and have an image file picture.jpg in it
and reference it in a html page with:
<img src="picture.jpg">
the rendered page will not show the image and the html code behind the image is:
http://localhost:8000/index.php/picture.jpg
If however, the html code in the page is:
<img src="/picture.jpg">
the picture displays correctly.
Hence relative addressing is broken in PHP 5.4.33 Win32 VC9 build.
If you would like to see the PHP's current configuration using the -i switch from the shell command line with php.ini specified, then the order of arguments is important. Putting -i after -c gives the intended result.
Info is printed out for the default php.ini (cli)
$ php -i --php-ini /etc/php/7.4/fpm/php.ini | grep -i "loaded conf"
Loaded Configuration File => /etc/php/7.4/cli/php.ini
Info is printed out for the desired php.ini (fpm)
$ php --php-ini /etc/php/7.4/fpm/php.ini -i | grep -i "loaded conf"
Loaded Configuration File => /etc/php/7.4/fpm/php.ini