I'm trying to run a PHP script continually in the background via the command line in Linux. I have tried the command php filename.php &
but it seems like the script execution terminates very quickly, while it should keep running until the process is terminated.
Any suggestions?
Where:
command-name
: name of shell script or command name. You can pass argument to command or a shell script.&
: nohup does not automatically put the command it runs in the background; you must do that explicitly, by ending the command line with an & symbol.the process may be closed when your session is closed.
try using
nohup php filename.php
Are you sure the script doesn't contain any errors? This is what normally makes "execution terminates very quickly".
First, append:
error_reporting(E_ALL); ini_set('display_errors', 1);
at the top of your script to display any errors it may have, then you can use:
nohup php filename.php &
OR
nohup php filename.php >/dev/null 2>&1 &
You can also use:
ignore_user_abort(1);
set_time_limit(0);
Notes
The
php
and thefilename.php
paths may be provided as a full-path, instead ofphp
andfilename.php
, you can use/usr/bin/php
and/full/path/to/filename.php
.Full Path is recommended to avoid file not found errors.
The greater-thans (
>
) in commands like these redirect the program’s output somewhere. In this case, something is being redirected to/dev/null
, and something is being redirected to&1
Standard in, out, and error
There are three standard sources of input and output for a program. Standard input usually comes from the keyboard if it’s an interactive program, or from another program if it’s processing the other program’s output. The program usually prints to standard output, and sometimes prints to standard error. These three file descriptors (you can think of them as “data pipes”) are often called
STDIN, STDOUT, and STDERR
.Sometimes they’re not named, they’re numbered! The built-in numberings for them are
0, 1, and 2
, in that order. By default, if you don’t name or number one explicitly, you’re talking aboutSTDOUT
.the command above is redirecting the standard output to
/dev/null
, which is a place you can dump anything you don’t want, then redirecting standard error into standard output (you have to put an&
in front of the destination when you do this).The short explanation, therefore, is “all output from this command should be shoved into a black hole.” That’s one good way to make a program be really quiet!
&
at the end puts the command in background.ref: https://www.xaprb.com/blog/2006/06/06/what-does-devnull-21-mean/