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PHP CLI won't log errors

PHP currently will not log errors produced from the command line.

I have :

log_errors = On
error_log = /var/log/php_errors.log

in /etc/php5/cli/php.ini

Am I missing a further setting to get this working?

Please check that the user account running PHP CLI has write access to /var/log/php_errors.log .

Additionally, you can verify that you are using the correct php.ini file like this:

php -a -c /etc/php5/cli/php.ini

This question and answer thread was very helpful to me while setting up PHP CLI logging on an Ubuntu 12.04 environment, so I wanted to post an answer that distills what I learned. In addition to the great info provided by David Chan as well as George Cummins I have created a logrotate.d script to ensure the PHP CLI error log doesn't grow out of control as well as set this up so multiple users will be able to log errors to the common PHP CLI error log.

First, the default behavior of the PHP CLI is to log error messages to standard output; logging to a file is not default behavior. Which usually means logging to the same command line terminal session that is running the PHP CLI command. While the PHP ini file does have accommodations for a specified error_log additional accommodations need to be made to truly make it work.

First, I had to create an initial php_errors.log file:

sudo touch /var/log/php_errors.log

Since the server in question is used by web developers working on various projects, I have setup a common group for them called www-users . And in this case, I want the php_errors.log to be readable and writable by www-users I change the ownership of the file like this:

sudo chown root:www-users /var/log/php_errors.log

And then change the permissions of the file to this:

sudo chmod 664 /var/log/php_errors.log

Yes, from a security standpoint having a log file readable and writable by anyone in www-users is not so great. But this is a controlled shared work environment. So I trust the users to respect things like this. And besides, when PHP is run from the CLI, any user who can do that will need write access to the logs anyway to even get a log written.

Next, go into /etc/php5/cli/php.ini to adjust the default Ubuntu 12.04 settings to match this new log file:

sudo nano /etc/php5/cli/php.ini

Happily log_errors is enabled by default in Ubuntu 12.04:

log_errors = On

But to allow logging to a file we need to change the error_log to match the new file like this:

error_log = /var/log/php_errors.log

Setup a logrotate.d script.

Now that should be it, but since I don't want logs to run out of control I set a logrotate.d for the php_errors.log . Create a file called php-cli in /etc/logrotate.d/ like this:

sudo nano /etc/logrotate.d/php-cli

And place the contents of this log rotate daemon script in there:

/var/log/php_errors.log {
        weekly
        missingok
        rotate 13
        compress
        delaycompress
        copytruncate
        notifempty
        create 664 root www-users
        sharedscripts
}

Testing the setup.

With that done, let's test the setup using David Chan 's tip above:

php -r "error_log('This is an error test that we hope works.');"

If that ran correctly, you should just be bounced back to an empty command prompt since PHP CLI errors are no longer being sent to standard output. So check the actual php_errors.log for the test error message like this:

tail -n 10 /var/log/php_errors.log

And there should be a timestamped error line in there that looks something like this:

[23-Jul-2014 16:04:56 UTC] This is an error test that we hope works.

as a diagnostic you can attempt to force a write to the error log this way.

php -c /etc/php5/cli/php.ini -r " error_log('test 123'); "

you should now see test 123 in your log

tail /var/log/php_errors.log

The logging/reporting behaviour of PHP is dependant on error_reporting too.

Some PHP frameworks (for example CodeIgniter) execute an error_reporting(E_STRICT) statement or equivalent, when in production mode, which will severely reduce the number/kind of logged errors.

If you want to debug something, then you can just put the following statement right before your code:

error_reporting(E_ALL);

If you can't figure out what why or perhaps don't have user permissions on php.ini, another way to debug a no-information parse error is to wrap your php source in another php source with body something like:

ini_set('display_errors',1);
error_reporting(E_ALL);

include "mybustedfile.php";

in PHP file

error_log("You messed up!", 3, "/var/tmp/my-errors.log");

in terminal

tail -f /var/tmp/my-errors.log

output You messed up!

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