Short answer:
sudo apt-get install php7.2-json
(or php7.1-json
or php5-json
depending on the PHP version you're running)
Then of course make sure you restart Apache:
sudo service apache2 restart
Or if you are using PHP-FPM:
sudo service php7.2-fpm restart
(Or php7.1-fpm
or php5-fpm
)
Debian has removed the previous JSON extension as of PHP 5.5rc2 due to a license conflict.
The JSON license has a clause which states:
The Software shall be used for Good, not Evil.
This causes a problem with Free Software Foundation's definition of free software which states:
The freedom to run the program, for any purpose (freedom 0).
FSF goes on to specifically list the JSON license as nonfree.
Yes it seems a bit silly. Nevertheless Debian has removed the non-compliant JSON extension, and instead offered a replacement extension that is functionally equivalent.
To be clear: PHP itself has NOT removed JSON, it's still in master. This is a distro / package manager issue.
Rasmus makes it pretty clear:
We have not removed json and we will never release a version of php without json support built in. Any changes in 5.5 is due to whatever distro packaging you are using which we have no control over.
http://iteration99.com/2013/php-json-licensing-and-php-5-5/
http://liorkaplan.wordpress.com/2013/06/01/bye-bye-non-free-php-json-extension/
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=63520
http://philsturgeon.co.uk/blog/2013/08/fud-cracker-php-55-never-lost-json-support
With Ubuntu :
sudo apt-get install php5-json
sudo service php5-fpm restart
Solution for LAMP users:
apt-get install php5-json
service apache2 restart
Source
If you're using phpbrew try to install json extension to fix error with undefined function json_decode():
phpbrew ext install json
The same issue with 7.1
apt-get install php7.1-json
sudo nano /etc/php/7.1/mods-available/json.ini
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With