I am running Apache 2.2.13 and PHP 5.2.12. Just installed PHP 5.2.12 manually (to have access to all extensions) and enabled OpenSSL. phpinfo() indicates OpenSSL is enabled and running OpenSSL 0.9.8k 25 Mar 2009.
I'm getting this error: PHP Fatal error: Call to undefined function ftp_ssl_connect().
I've seen where the PHP manual suggests 'ftp_ssl_connect() is only available if both the ftp module and the OpenSSL support is built statically into php' and further states that 'you must compile your own PHP binaries' to make it work with Windows.
I have the suspicion that phpinfo() only indicates OpenSSL as being 'enabled' because I have uncommented the line 'extension=php_openssl.dll' and have the correct dlls in the correct folders and the correct path in the environment variables. And perhaps a static build into PHP must be accomplished regardless of what phpinfo() indicates.
I believe the objective of distribution (as described above) is for dynamic extensions, but recompiling (for OpenSSL) is to encode a static extension.
ftp extension is working fine (built into PHP 5.2). I test this with the following code:
$conn_id = ftp_connect($url); $login_result = ftp_login($conn_id, $username, $password); ftp_close($conn_id);
Note that to check ssl, I only change ftp_connect to ftp_ssl_connect. When reaching this line, I get the PHP error above in my Apache error log file.
As the documentation states (quoting what you already quoted) :
You say you installed PHP "manually" ; but this probably still means you used an "official" build from php.net -- which means you have not compiled your own PHP binaries... So, that function is not available.
There is no magic : it seems you'll have to re-compile PHP, using the right configuration options at compile-time, if you want to be able to use that function...
Here's some documentation about that : Build your own PHP on Windows -- but... good luck... i've never heard it was "simple" to compile PHP on windows, actually (it's not that hard on Linux, but Linux is maybe a bit more well suited when it comes to compilation)
A couple of other solutions :