Difference between revisions of "PHP/CLI"
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* <code>[https://www.php.net/manual/en/reserved.variables.argv.php $argv][]</code> contains an array of all the arguments passed to the script | * <code>[https://www.php.net/manual/en/reserved.variables.argv.php $argv][]</code> contains an array of all the arguments passed to the script | ||
** <code>$argv[0]</code> is always the name that was used to run the script. | ** <code>$argv[0]</code> is always the name that was used to run the script. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Note that these variables are only present in the global scope; to use them inside of objects, they will need to be passed in somehow. | ||
Other: | Other: |
Latest revision as of 16:34, 29 September 2023
Although PHP is most commonly used to write web applications, it can also be used for scripts that run from a command line interface (CLI). The CLI environment is a little different than the web environment, and PHP's current documentation doesn't make it easy to locate the relevant pieces.
Arguments
Predefined variables:
$argc
contains the number of arguments passed to the current script$argv[]
contains an array of all the arguments passed to the script$argv[0]
is always the name that was used to run the script.
Note that these variables are only present in the global scope; to use them inside of objects, they will need to be passed in somehow.
Other:
getopt()
parses individual arguments in a standard way- Note that this ignores any options listed after non-options.
cli_get_process_title()
cli_set_process_title()
See also file/glob for interfacing with the CLI environment's file-globbing services
Interactivity
- GNU Readline manages editable input lines
fgetc()
reads a single character, but waits for a CRLF- See the comments for ways to wait for the user to actually just press a single character.
- ncurses: PECL package last updated in 2012