exec

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7)

exec执行一个外部程序

说明

exec ( string $command [, array &$output [, int &$return_var ]] ) : string

exec() 执行 command 参数所指定的命令。

参数

command

要执行的命令。

output

如果提供了 output 参数, 那么会用命令执行的输出填充此数组, 每行输出填充数组中的一个元素。 数组中的数据不包含行尾的空白字符,例如 \n 字符。 请注意,如果数组中已经包含了部分元素,exec() 函数会在数组末尾追加内容。如果你不想在数组末尾进行追加, 请在传入 exec() 函数之前 对数组使用 unset() 函数进行重置。

return_var

如果同时提供 outputreturn_var 参数, 命令执行后的返回状态会被写入到此变量。

返回值

命令执行结果的最后一行内容。 如果你需要获取未经处理的全部输出数据, 请使用 passthru() 函数。

如果想要获取命令的输出内容, 请确保使用 output 参数。

范例

Example #1 exec() 例程

<?php
// 输出运行中的 php/httpd 进程的创建者用户名
// (在可以执行 "whoami" 命令的系统上)
echo exec('whoami');
?>

注释

Warning

当用户提供的数据传入此函数,使用 escapeshellarg()escapeshellcmd() 来确保用户欺骗系统从而执行任意命令。

Note:

如何程序使用此函数启动,为了能保持在后台运行,此程序必须将输出重定向到文件或其它输出流。否则会导致 PHP 挂起,直至程序执行结束。

Note:

On Windows exec() will first start cmd.exe to launch the command. If you want to start an external program without starting cmd.exe use proc_open() with the bypass_shell option set.

Note: 安全模式 启用时,可仅可用 safe_mode_exec_dir 执行文件。实际上,现在不允许在到可执行的路径中存在 .. 组件。

Warning

安全模式 启用时,命令字符串会被 escapeshellcmd() 转换。因此,echo y | echo x 会变成 echo y \| echo x

参见

User Contributed Notes

Paul Sommer 14-May-2016 01:33
I tried to execute a command in background under Windows.
After struggling for hours with all these half ready examples I would like to share the syntax I found working (for windows at least). This is not tested under Linux as there are more elegant ways to spawn a process.

Based on  the function from Arno van den Brink.

<?php
function execInBackground($cmd) {
    if (
substr(php_uname(), 0, 7) == "Windows"){
       
pclose(popen("start /B ". $cmd, "r"));
    }
    else {
       
exec($cmd . " > /dev/null &"); 
    }
}
?>

This works perfectly with e.g.
<?php
execInBackground
('del c:\tmp\*.*')
?>

but the following does NOT work:
<?php
execInBackground
('\"c:\path with spaces\my program.exe\"')
?>

Why?
When windows sees quotation marks (\") it thinks this is the window title, not the command.
So, when your command needs quotation marks you HAVE TO provide a window name first, like
execInBackground("\"title\"" "\"c:\path with spaces\my program.exe\")

Quotation marks are mandatiory for window title. Otherwise windows thinks this is the program name.

Weired, but "Hey! it's Windows!" :)
Simon 24-Nov-2014 05:07
Can't get the output from your exec'd command to appear in the $output array?
Is it echo'ing all over your shell instead?

Append "2>&1" to the end of your command, for example:

exec("xmllint --noout ~/desktop/test.xml 2>&1", $retArr, $retVal);

Will fill the array $retArr with the expected output; one line per array key.
juan at laluca dot com 13-Jan-2011 07:36
I was trying to get an acceslist from a remote computer by executing cacls and parse it in php, all in a  Windows environment with Apache. First i discovered psexec.exe from Windows SysInternals.

But with the following line, I didn′t get anything, it get hunged, although from the command line it worked nice:

<?php exec ('c:\\WINDOWS\\system32\\psexec.exe \\192.168.1.224 -u myuser -p mypassword -accepteula cacls c:\\documents\\RRHH && exit', $arrACL ); ?>

To make it work I just followed the next steps:
- execute services.msc and find the apache service (In my case wampapache)
- Right button>Log On tab and change from Local System Account to a user created account, enter the username and the password and restart the service.

(I added this user to the administrators group to avoid permissions problems but its not recommended...)

It worked! And it may work with IIS too so try it if you have the same poblem....

Hope this helps someone, and sorry for my english
alvaro at demogracia dot com 27-Dec-2010 05:27
In Windows, exec() issues an internal call to "cmd /c your_command". This implies that your command must follow the rules imposed by cmd.exe which includes an extra set of quotes around the full command:

- http://ss64.com/nt/cmd.html

Current PHP versions take this into account and add the quotes automatically, but old versions didn't.

Apparently, the change was made in PHP/5.3.0 yet not backported to 5.2.x because it's a backwards incompatible change. To sum up:

- In PHP/5.2 and older you have to surround the full command plus arguments in double quotes
- In PHP/5.3 and greater you don't have to (if you do, your script will break)

If you are interested in the internals, this is the source code:

sprintf(cmd, "%s /c \"%s\"", TWG(comspec), command);

It can be found at http://svn.php.net/viewvc/ (please find php/php-src/trunk/TSRM/tsrm_win32.c, the comment system doesn't allow the direct link).
Martin Lakes 21-Dec-2010 08:20
Took quite some time to figure out the line I am going to post next. If you want to execute a command in the background without having the script waiting for the result, you can do the following:

<?php
passthru
("/usr/bin/php /path/to/script.php ".$argv_parameter." >> /path/to/log_file.log 2>&1 &");
?>

There are a few thing that are important here.

First of all: put the full path to the php binary, because this command will run under the apache user, and you will probably not have command alias like php set in that user.

Seccond: Note 2 things at the end of the command string: the '2>&1' and the '&'. The '2>&1' is for redirecting errors to the standard IO. And the most important thing is the '&' at the end of the command string, which tells the terminal not to wait for a response.

Third: Make sure you have 777 permissions on the 'log_file.log' file

Enojy!
elwiz at 3e dot pl 06-Sep-2010 06:10
On Windows-Apache-PHP servers there is a problem with using the exec command more than once at the same time. If a script (with the exec command) is loaded more than once by the same user at the same time the server will freeze.
In my case the PHP script using the exec command was used as the source of an image tag. More than one image in one HTML made the server stop.
The problem is described here (http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=44942) toghether with a solution - stop the session before the exec command and start it again after it.

<?php

session_write_close
();
exec($cmd);
session_start();

?>
bahri at bahri dot info 20-Mar-2009 01:15
[NOTE BY danbrown AT php DOT net: The following is a Linux script that the contributor of this note suggests be placed in a file named 'pstools.inc.php' to execute a process, check if a process exists, and kill a process by ID.  Inspired by the Windows version at http://php.net/exec#59428 ]


<?php
 
function PsExecute($command, $timeout = 60, $sleep = 2) {
       
// First, execute the process, get the process ID

       
$pid = PsExec($command);

        if(
$pid === false )
            return
false;

       
$cur = 0;
       
// Second, loop for $timeout seconds checking if process is running
       
while( $cur < $timeout ) {
           
sleep($sleep);
           
$cur += $sleep;
           
// If process is no longer running, return true;

          
echo "\n ---- $cur ------ \n";

            if( !
PsExists($pid) )
                return
true; // Process must have exited, success!
       
}

       
// If process is still running after timeout, kill the process and return false
       
PsKill($pid);
        return
false;
    }

    function
PsExec($commandJob) {

       
$command = $commandJob.' > /dev/null 2>&1 & echo $!';
       
exec($command ,$op);
       
$pid = (int)$op[0];

        if(
$pid!="") return $pid;

        return
false;
    }

    function
PsExists($pid) {

       
exec("ps ax | grep $pid 2>&1", $output);

        while( list(,
$row) = each($output) ) {

               
$row_array = explode(" ", $row);
               
$check_pid = $row_array[0];

                if(
$pid == $check_pid) {
                        return
true;
                }

        }

        return
false;
    }

    function
PsKill($pid) {
       
exec("kill -9 $pid", $output);
    }
?>
dell_petter at hotmail dot com 04-Feb-2009 02:52
(This is for linux users only).

We know now how we can fork a process in linux with the & operator.
And by using command: nohup MY_COMMAND > /dev/null 2>&1 & echo $! we can return the pid of the process.

This small class is made so you can keep in track of your created processes ( meaning start/stop/status ).

You may use it to start a process or join an exisiting PID process.

<?php
   
// You may use status(), start(), and stop(). notice that start() method gets called automatically one time.
   
$process = new Process('ls -al');

   
// or if you got the pid, however here only the status() metod will work.
   
$process = new Process();
   
$process.setPid(my_pid);
?>

<?php
   
// Then you can start/stop/ check status of the job.
   
$process.stop();
   
$process.start();
    if (
$process.status()){
        echo
"The process is currently running";
    }else{
        echo
"The process is not running.";
    }
?>

<?php
/* An easy way to keep in track of external processes.
 * Ever wanted to execute a process in php, but you still wanted to have somewhat controll of the process ? Well.. This is a way of doing it.
 * @compability: Linux only. (Windows does not work).
 * @author: Peec
 */
class Process{
    private
$pid;
    private
$command;

    public function
__construct($cl=false){
        if (
$cl != false){
           
$this->command = $cl;
           
$this->runCom();
        }
    }
    private function
runCom(){
       
$command = 'nohup '.$this->command.' > /dev/null 2>&1 & echo $!';
       
exec($command ,$op);
       
$this->pid = (int)$op[0];
    }

    public function
setPid($pid){
       
$this->pid = $pid;
    }

    public function
getPid(){
        return
$this->pid;
    }

    public function
status(){
       
$command = 'ps -p '.$this->pid;
       
exec($command,$op);
        if (!isset(
$op[1]))return false;
        else return
true;
    }

    public function
start(){
        if (
$this->command != '')$this->runCom();
        else return
true;
    }

    public function
stop(){
       
$command = 'kill '.$this->pid;
       
exec($command);
        if (
$this->status() == false)return true;
        else return
false;
    }
}
?>
Arno van den Brink 13-Oct-2008 08:04
This will execute $cmd in the background (no cmd window) without PHP waiting for it to finish, on both Windows and Unix.

<?php
function execInBackground($cmd) {
    if (
substr(php_uname(), 0, 7) == "Windows"){
       
pclose(popen("start /B ". $cmd, "r")); 
    }
    else {
       
exec($cmd . " > /dev/null &");  
    }
}
?>
dr_jones153 at hotmail dot com 23-Jan-2008 07:04
If SAFE_MODE is on, and you are trying to run a script in the background by appending "> /dev/null 2> /dev/null & echo $!" to the command line, the browser will hang until the script is done.

My solution:

Create a shell script (ex. runscript.sh) which contains the execution line for the script you are trying to run in the background.
The runscript.sh is run by an exec() call without the redirect string, which is now placed in the runscript.sh.

runscript.sh will return almost immediately because output of the original script is redirected, and so will not hang your browser and the script runs fine in the background.
Farhad Malekpour 26-Jul-2007 04:24
If you're trying to use exec in a script that uses signal SIGCHLD, (i.e. pcntl_signal(SIGCHLD,'sigHandler');) it will return -1 as the exit code of the command (although output is correct!). To resolve this remove the signal handler and add it again after exec. Code will be something like this:

...
pcntl_signal(SIGCHLD, 'sigHandler');
...
...
(more codes, functions, classes, etc)
...
...
// Now executing the command via exec
// Clear the signal
pcntl_signal(SIGCHLD, SIG_DFL);
// Execute the command
exec('mycommand',$output,$retval);
// Set the signal back to our handler
pcntl_signal(SIGCHLD, 'sigHandler');
// At this point we have correct value of $retval.

Same solution can apply to system and passthru as well.
Bob-PHP at HamsterRepublic dot com 18-Oct-2005 11:00
exec strips trailing whitespace off the output of a command. This makes it impossible to capture signifigant whitespace. For example, suppose that a program outputs columns of tab-delimited text, and the last column contains empty fields on some lines. The trailing tabs are important, but get thrown away.

If you need to preserve trialing whitespace, you must use popen() instead.
layton at layton dot tk 18-Jan-2005 03:52
This is the second time this one got me, I thought someone else might find this note useful too.

I am creating a long running exec'd process that I can access with page submissions up to 2 hours later. The problem is this, the first time I access the page everything works like it should. The second time the web browser waits and waits and never gets any messages -- the CPU time is not affected so it is apparent that something is blocked.

What is actually happening is that all of the open files are being copied to the exec'd process -- including the network connections. So the second time I try to access the web page, I am being given the old http network connection which is now being ignored.

The solution is to scan all file handles from 3 on up and close them all. Remember that handles 0, 1, and 2 are standard input, standard output, and standard error.
msheakoski @t yahoo d@t com 08-Jul-2004 08:40
I too wrestled with getting a program to run in the background in Windows while the script continues to execute.  This method unlike the other solutions allows you to start any program minimized, maximized, or with no window at all.  llbra@phpbrasil's solution does work but it sometimes produces an unwanted window on the desktop when you really want the task to run hidden.

start Notepad.exe minimized in the background:

<?php
$WshShell
= new COM("WScript.Shell");
$oExec = $WshShell->Run("notepad.exe", 7, false);
?>

start a shell command invisible in the background:
<?php
$WshShell
= new COM("WScript.Shell");
$oExec = $WshShell->Run("cmd /C dir /S %windir%", 0, false);
?>

start MSPaint maximized and wait for you to close it before continuing the script:
<?php
$WshShell
= new COM("WScript.Shell");
$oExec = $WshShell->Run("mspaint.exe", 3, true);
?>

For more info on the Run() method go to:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/script56/html/wsMthRun.asp
hans at internit dot NO_SPAM dot com 02-Feb-2002 02:25
From what I've gathered asking around, there is no way to pass back a perl array into a php script using the exec function.

The suggestion is to just print out your perl array variables at the end of your script, and then grabbing each array member from the array returned by the exec function. If you will be passing multiple arrays, or if you need to keep track of array keys as well as values, then as you print each array or hash variable at the end of your perl script, you should concatenate the value with the key and array name, using an underscore, as in:
 
foreach (@array) print "(array name)_(member_key)_($_)" ;

Then you would simply iterate through the array returned by the exec function, and split each variable along the underscore.

Here I like to especially thank Marat for the knowledge. Hope this is useful to others in search for similar answer!