For common commands like 'ls', exec() works fine, eg:
exec('ls',$output,$retval);
var_dump($output,$retval);
// $output contains an array of filenames, and retval === 0
But when trying to execute another program, I can't get the output:
exec('some_command --a_parameter',$output,$retval);
var_dump($output,$retval);
// $output contains an empty array, end $retval === 0
This command prints some lines when executing it directly from the command-line though. I know the command has been successful because of the results (some files updated, data added, etc), and yet I can't see the output.
Any ideas?
It sounds like the program is outputting its warnings to standard error rather than standard output. exec
will only catch standard output. I don't know for certain that standard error is always sent to the apache error log, but it seems likely.
If you don't need compatibility with non-*nix systems, you can redirect standard error to standard output by appending 2>&1
to the command:
exec('some_command --option 2>&1', $output, $ret);
This should both make the warnings available to your php program and prevent unnecessary logging.
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