php(1) Scripting Language php(1)

php - PHP Command Line Interface 'CLI'

php-cgi - PHP Common Gateway Interface 'CGI' command

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

php [options] -S addr:port [-t docroot]

PHP is a widely-used general-purpose scripting language that is especially suited for Web development and can be embedded into HTML. This is the command line interface that enables you to do the following:

You can parse and execute files by using parameter -f followed by the name of the file to be executed.

Using parameter -r you can directly execute PHP code simply as you would do inside a .php file when using the eval() function.

It is also possible to process the standard input line by line using either the parameter -R or -F. In this mode each separate input line causes the code specified by -R or the file specified by -F to be executed. You can access the input line by $argn. While processing the input lines $argi contains the number of the actual line being processed. Further more the parameters -B and -E can be used to execute code (see -r) before and after all input lines have been processed respectively. Notice that the input is read from STDIN and therefore reading from STDIN explicitly changes the next input line or skips input lines.

PHP also contains an built-in web server for application development purpose. By using the -S option where addr:port point to a local address and port PHP will listen to HTTP requests on that address and port and serve files from the current working directory or the docroot passed by the -t option.

If a PHP file is provided to the command line when the built-in web server is used, it will be used as the router script. This script will be started at each HTTP request. The script output is returned to the browser, unless the router script returns the false value. If so, the built-in server falls back to the default behaviour, returning the requested resource as-is by looking up the files relative to the document root specified by the -t option, if provided.

If none of -r -f -B -R -F -E or -S is present but a single parameter is given then this parameter is taken as the filename to parse and execute (same as with -f). If no parameter is present then the standard input is read and executed.

--interactive
-a
Run PHP interactively. This lets you enter snippets of PHP code that directly get executed. When readline support is enabled you can edit the lines and also have history support.
--bindpath address:port|port
-b address:port|port
Bind Path for external FASTCGI Server mode (CGI only).
--no-chdir
-C
Do not chdir to the script's directory (CGI only).
--no-header
-q
Quiet-mode. Suppress HTTP header output (CGI only).
--timing count
-T count
Measure execution time of script repeated count times (CGI only).
--php-ini path|file
-c path|file
Look for php.ini file in the directory path or use the specified file
--no-php-ini
-n
No php.ini file will be used
--define foo[=bar]
-d foo[=bar]
Define INI entry foo with value bar
Generate extended information for debugger/profiler
--file file
-f file
Parse and execute file
--help
-h
This help
--hide-args
-H
Hide script name (file) and parameters (args...) from external tools. For example you may want to use this when a php script is started as a daemon and the command line contains sensitive data such as passwords.
--info
-i
PHP information and configuration
--syntax-check
-l
Syntax check only (lint)
--modules
-m
Show compiled in modules
--run code
-r code
Run PHP code without using script tags '<?..?>'
--process-begin code
-B begin_code
Run PHP begin_code before processing input lines
--process-code code
-R code
Run PHP code for every input line
--process-file file
-F file
Parse and execute file for every input line
--process-end code
-E end_code
Run PHP end_code after processing all input lines
--syntax-highlight
-s
Output HTML syntax highlighted source
--server addr:port
-S addr:port
Start built-in web server on the given local address and port
--docroot docroot
-t docroot
Specify the document root to be used by the built-in web server
--version
-v
Version number
--strip
-w
Output source with stripped comments and whitespace
--zend-extension file
-z file
Load Zend extension file
Arguments passed to script. Use '--' args when first argument starts with '-' or script is read from stdin
--rfunction
name
--rf
name Shows information about function name
--rclass
name
--rc
name Shows information about class name
--rextension
name
--re
name Shows information about extension name
--rzendextension
name
--rz
name Shows information about Zend extension name
--rextinfo
name
--ri
name Shows configuration for extension name
Show configuration file names

The configuration file for the CLI version of PHP.
The standard configuration file will only be used when php-cli.ini cannot be found.

This command simply writes the text "Hello World" to standard out.
This shows the configuration of your gd extension. You can use this to easily check which image formats you can use. If you have any dynamic modules you may want to use the same ini file that php uses when executed from your webserver. There are more extensions which have such a function. For dba use:
php -r 'print_r(dba_handlers(1));'
This PHP command strips off the HTML tags line by line and outputs the result. To see how it works you can first look at the following PHP command ´php -d html_errors=1 -i´ which uses PHP to output HTML formatted configuration information. If you then combine those two ´php ...|php ...´ you'll see what happens.
Using this PHP command you can count the lines being input.
In this example PHP expects each input line being a file. It counts all lines of the files specified by each input line and shows the summarized result. You may combine this with tools like find and change the php scriptlet.
Since you have access to STDIN from within -B -R -F and -E you can skip certain input lines with your code. But note that in such cases $argi only counts the lines being processed by php itself. Having read this you will guess what the above program does: skipping every second input line.

You can use a shebang line to automatically invoke php from scripts. Only the CLI version of PHP will ignore such a first line as shown below:

#!/bin/php

<?php


// your script

?>

For a more or less complete description of PHP look here:

http://www.php.net/manual/

You can view the list of known bugs or report any new bug you found at:

https://github.com/php/php-src/issues

The PHP Group: Thies C. Arntzen, Stig Bakken, Andi Gutmans, Rasmus Lerdorf, Sam Ruby, Sascha Schumann, Zeev Suraski, Jim Winstead, Andrei Zmievski.

Additional work for the CLI sapi was done by Edin Kadribasic, Marcus Boerger and Johannes Schlueter.

A List of active developers can be found here:

http://www.php.net/credits.php

And last but not least PHP was developed with the help of a huge amount of contributors all around the world.

This manpage describes php, version 8.3.14.

Copyright © The PHP Group

This source file is subject to version 3.01 of the PHP license, that is bundled with this package in the file LICENSE, and is available through the world-wide-web at the following url:

https://www.php.net/license/3_01.txt

If you did not receive a copy of the PHP license and are unable to obtain it through the world-wide-web, please send a note to license@php.net so we can mail you a copy immediately.

2024 The PHP Group