Stut wrote:
> Jochem Maas wrote:
>> I have been trying to figure out how to use exec to run some
>> commandline scripts (some perl scripts & mysql in this case) WITH the
>> output of the commands run via exec being shown on the screen.
>>
>> neither of these examples have the desired effect:
>>
>> $output = array(); $exit = 0; exec('apache2ctl graceful', $output,
>> $exit);
>>
>>
>> $output = array(); $exit = 0; @exec('apache2ctl graceful', $output,
>> $exit);
>>
>> please someone tell me there is a decent way to do this (something to
>> do with STD input/output redirection or something?) and that I'm not
>> left with trying something like:
>>
>> ob_start(); $output = array(); $exit1 = $exit2 = 0; @exec('apache2ctl
>> graceful', $output, $exit1); ob_end_clean();
>>
>> ... of which I don't even know if it would work.
>>
>> anyone care to share their clue?
>
> Chances are that the output is being sent to stderr instead of stdout.
> You need to redirect stderr output to stdout in the command...
you are absolutely right - I fnid it strange that so many commandline apps
stick their 'normal' output to stderr (like I said to Edward: "how is
'Syntax OK' in any way to be considered an error?").
oh well at least now I no how to handle the issue - and I'll be sticking rhe
'2>&1' after ever command sent to the shell via exec() from now on :-)
thanks for your help.
>
> exec('apache2ctl graceful 2>&1', $output, $exit);
>
> Also, in my experience it's better to provide the full path to anything
> you shell out to from PHP, especially if it's going to be executed from
> a web request.
I just read the same advice in the manual. :-)
but there no web-request involved here (and I want to keep the script as
portable as poss.)
it's actually a custom CMS installer for a mini CMS thang I wrote ... (it needs
to restart the webserver after an install is complete)
>
> -Stut
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