I am on shared hosting and have cPanel , Apache, and PHP is run by FastCGI . Where does PHP store the error log?
Is there another way I can find the error log on a shared hosting environment instead of having to go through entire site structure to look for error_log files?
I have access to the php.ini file (I am using PHP version 5.2.16).
PHP stores error logs in /var/log/apache2
if PHP is an apache2 module. Shared hosts are often storing log files in your root directory /log
subfolder. But...if you have access to a php.ini
file you can do this:
error_log = /var/log/php-scripts.log
According to rinogo 's comment: If you're using cPanel, the master log file you're probably looking for is stored (by default) at
/usr/local/apache/logs/error_log
If all else fails you can check the location of the log file using
<?php phpinfo(); ?>
尝试phpinfo()
并检查“error_log”
php --info | grep error
The terminal will output the error log location.
php --info | findstr /r /c:"error_log"
The command prompt will output the error log location
Open your php.ini
and add the following line:
error_log = /log/myCustomLog.log
Thanks @chelmertez , @Boom for these (comments on the question).
On a LAMP environment the php errors are default directed to this below file.
/var/log/httpd/error_log
All access logs come under:
/var/log/httpd/access_log
How do find your PHP error log on Linux:
eric@dev /var $ sudo updatedb
[sudo] password for eric:
eric@dev /var $ sudo locate error_log
/var/log/httpd/error_log
Another equivalent way:
eric@dev /home/eric $ sudo find / -name "error_log" 2>/dev/null
/var/log/httpd/error_log
It appears that by default php does not log errors anywhere, the error_log
key in php.ini is commented out in all the install's I've seen.
Generally I:
locate php.ini
. Search these files for the error_reporting
value;
Which should be set to whatever amalgamation of php log levels are enough for you. ,
Eg: E_ALL & ~E_DEPRECATED & ~E_STRICT
Check the error_log
value to make sure it points to an actual place and is not commented out.
The default value doesn't give a full path, only a file name, I don't know where this path resolves to normally. Probably /var/log/
.
It can also be /var/log/apache2/error.log
if you are in google compute engine.
And you can view tail like this:
tail -f /var/log/apache2/error.log
You should use absolute path when setting error_log variable in your php.ini file, otherwise, error logs will be stored according to your relative path.
error_log = /var/log/php.errors
Other solution would be writing simple script which would list all error logs files from directory tree.
php --info | grep error
This is helpful. commented by sjas on question. so i included it as a answer.
NGINX usually stores it in /var/log/nginx/error.log or access.log. (On Ubuntu in any case)
If you have build Apache and PHP from source, then the error logs by default is generated at your ${Apache install dir}/logs/error_log
ie generally /usr/local/apache2/logs/error_log
. Else, if you have installed it from repository, you will find it at /var/log/apache2/error_log
.You can set the path in your php.ini
also and verify it by invoking phpinfo()
.
The best way is to look in your httpd.conf file and see what the default is. It could also be overridden by your specific virtual host. I start by looking at /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
or /etc/apache2/httpd.conf
and search for error_log. It could be listed as either /var/log/httpd/error_log or /var/log/apache2/error_log
but it might also be listed as simply logs/error_log
.
In this case it is a relative path, which means it will be under /etc/httpd/logs/error_log
. If you still can't find it check the bottom of your httpd.conf file and see where your virtual hosts are included. It might be in /etc/httpd/conf.d/<- as "other" or "extra". Your virtual host could override it then with ErrorLog "/path/to/error_log".
When configuring your error log file in php.ini, you can use an absolute path or a relative path. A relative path will be resolved based on the location of the generating script, and you'll get a log file in each directory you have scripts in. If you want all your error messages to go to the same file, use an absolute path to the file.
See more here: http://www.php.net/manual/en/ref.errorfunc.php#53025
如果你使用 php5-fpm 日志默认应该在
/var/log/php5-fpm.log
无论你想在哪里,如果你将它设置为你的函数调用: error_log($errorMessageforLog . "\\n", 4, 'somePath/SomeFileName.som');
Search the httpd.conf file for ErrorLog
by running cat <file location> | grep ErrorLog
cat <file location> | grep ErrorLog
on the command line. For example:
$ cat /etc/apache2/httpd.conf | grep ErrorLog
Output:
# ErrorLog: The location of the error log file.
# If you do not specify an ErrorLog directive within a <VirtualHost>
ErrorLog "/private/var/log/apache2/error_log"
Find the line that starts with ErrorLog
and there's your answer.
Note: For virtual hosts, you can edit the virtual hosts file httpd-vhosts.conf
to specify a different log file location.
cPanel Error logs are located in:
/usr/local/cpanel/logs/
/usr/local/apache/logs/
By default Apche logs are located inside:
/var/log/apache
or
/var/log/apache2
If anyone is using custom log location then you can check it by running this command:
cat /etc/apache2/ conf /httpd.conf | grep ErrorLog
If you are getting error that apache2 directory does not exist then you can run this command to find correct location by:
whereis apache
or
whereis apache2
something like this :
sudo locate error.log | xargs -IX grep -iH "errorlog" X
or
sudo locate error_log | xargs -IX grep -iH "errorlog" X
or
sudo find / -iname "error?log" 2>/dev/null | xargs -IX grep -iH "errorlog" X
You are on share environment and cannot find error log, always check if cPanel has option Errors on your cPanel dashboard. If you are not being able to find error log, then you can find it there .
On cPanel search bar, search Error, it will show Error Pages which are basically lists of different http error pages and other Error is where the error logs are displayed.
Other places to look on shared environment: /home/yourusername/logs /home/yourusername/public_html/error_log
对于 centos 8 var/log/httpd/error_log
You can see the php errors for an account under:
/home/username/logs/domain_tld.php.error.log
You can set php error log globally and locally.
Globally through WHM:
Locally though cPanel:
Home directory will set the option for all domains, addons, and subdomains configured on the account A specific domain will limit the change to that domain, or, in the case of an addon domain, the addon and the matching subdomain
If PHP-fpm is enabled:
Wordpress will direct error_log()
messages to /wp-content/debug.log
when WP_DEBUG_LOG
is set to true.
For PHP-FPM just search config file for error_log
:
# cat /etc/php-fpm.d/www.conf | grep error_log
php_admin_value[error_log] = /var/log/php-fpm/www-error.log
A bit late and a lot of great answers were given, but mine for some reason stored it in:
/var/log/php-errors.log
I'm using Ubuntu Server 16.04 and PHP 7.1.28.
On shared cPanel environment you cannot find error log, if your hosting provider don't provide any option in cPanel Dashboard. You can search "error" and see if your provider have any.
Otherwise normally you will find a file called "error_log" on your public_html file, which have all the php error recorded.
I can guarantee you, I am not the only person who has been driven to madness at least once in a frustrating search for a log file. It seems like it should be the easiest thing to find in the whole system.
A definitive guide on where php error log is stored would be a complicated bit of work. The official php manual does not even try to address the whole topic, because there are dependencies on systems outside php, such as the operating system (linux vs. Windows, which distro of linux), including settings within Windows and linux that affect name and location of the php error log.
Until someone takes the time to write a complete, cross-system guide, the best you are going to get is general directions where you can inquire. Every php developer has had to endure agony in this pursuit, with one exception. If you work in one place and the information is provided when you first need it, then you have the information need forever, that is, until you find yourself in a new working environment. There are such fortunate people.
If the information is not given to you on a silver platter, so to speak, you have some hunting to do. The hunt is not the longest you will face in your career, but it is not the simplest either.
As is evident from the many answers already posted, a smart place to begin is the output of phpinfo(). To view it, create a php file containing this:
<?php
phpinfo();
Either browse to that file or run it from the command line. If you do both, you likely will find the error_log is in different places, depending on command line vs. web server use of php. That is because the php that runs on a webserver is not the same php that runs from the command line, even when the command line is on the same machine as the web server. The answers already posted in this thread mostly are making an unstated assumption that php is running as part of a web server.
`
The default for error_log is no value
Whatever the value is, it comes from the php.ini files used to configure php. There can be many php.ini files. Finding your way among them is confusing at first, but you do not need to deal with this to find your php log.
If the output from phpinfo() shows a full path to a file, that is where the log is. You are lucky.
The trick is there usually is not a full path indicated in phpinfo(). When there is not a full path, the location depends on:
Whether error_log is no value . If it is, the log file location will depend on the operating system and the mode php is running. If php is running as an apache module, on linux the log often is in /var/log/apache2/error.log Another likely spot is in a logs directory in your account home directory, ~/logs/error.log
If there is a file name without a path, the location depends on whether the file name has the value syslog . If it syslog , then the php error log is injected into the syslog for the server, which varies by linux distro. A common location is /var/log/syslog, but it can be anywhere. Even the name of the syslog varies by distro.
If the name without a path is not syslog, a frequent home for the file is is the document root of the website (aka, website home directory, not to be confused with the home directory for your account).
This cheat sheet has been helpful in some situations, but I regret to have to admit it is not nearly universal. You have my condolences.
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