Background
I use a RedHat machine without root access, no access to the yum packet manager and no Docker support. This is the policy unfortunately at my work.
I have configured Apache and PHP using a tar file in a folder. Also done same for MongoDB, now I try to configure the PHP drivers for MongoDB according to these instructions:
https://docs.mongodb.com/drivers/php/
However I get stuck on the first bullet:
sudo pecl install mongodb
Problem
Do I need PECL? Can the extension be downloaded manually, and added to PHP?
I have tried to download the mongodb extension manually from:
https://pecl.php.net/package/mongodb
How to compile it mongodb.so? I tried to run pecl on a machine where I have root access then I saw it downloaded the mongodb-1.10.0.tgz and run make (in output when installing).
When I unpack the tgz file manually, I am not able to run make. How to use the makefile.frag? How to run make?
Here is a link on how to build mongodb.so:
https://www.php.net/manual/en/mongodb.installation.manual.php
git clone https://github.com/mongodb/mongo-php-driver.git
cd mongo-php-driver
git submodule update --init
phpize
./configure
make all
sudo make install
You can also unpack the mongodb-1.10.0.tgz file with:
tar -xvf mongodb-1.10.0.tgz
phpize
make all
sudo make install
Related
I'm trying to install a PHP Extension on my Linux Server however the installation process is confusing.
They provide this instructions.
git clone https://github.com/longxinH/xhprof.git ./xhprof
cd xhprof/extension/
/path/to/php7/bin/phpize
./configure --with-php-config=/path/to/php7/bin/php-config
make && sudo make install
I done git clone on PHP Extensions Folder
The thing that confuse me is
/path/to/php7/bin/phpize
Where is php7 bin?
The closest thing i found is /usr/bin/php
but its an executable file.
Inside this directory
/usr/bin/
I have php , php7.4, php-config, phpconfig7.4
I need SQLite minimum version 3.8 to support a MediaWiki install on Amazon EC2. Amazon Linux is based on CentOS and the latest version available in the yum repository is SQLite 3.7.17.
The downloads available from sqlite.org don't include 64-bit Linux. There is a GitHub repository that has a prebuilt 64-bit version, however it's only the command line version. I put it at /usr/bin:
$ which sqlite3
/usr/bin/sqlite3
$ sqlite3 --version
sqlite3: /lib64/libtinfo.so.5: no version information available (required by sqlite3)
3.26.0 2018-12-01 12:34:55 bf8c1b2b7a5960c282e543b9c293686dccff272512d08865f4600fb58238b4f9
But MediaWiki still complains I have SQLite 3.7.17 installed. When I test it I get:
$ cat x.php
<?php
print_r(SQLite3::version());
?>
Run it:
$ php7 x.php
Array
(
[versionString] => 3.7.17
[versionNumber] => 3007017
)
I am guessing this is because of these libraries:
$ sudo find / -name "libsqlite*"
/usr/lib64/libsqlite3.so.0
/usr/lib64/libsqlite3.so.0.8.6
How can I download/rebuild or otherwise install a later version of these SQLite libraries?
The easiest option I found was to build it myself. Tested on Amazon Linux release 2 (Karoo).
Download the latest source code with the configure script from here. Currently this is:
curl https://www.sqlite.org/2020/sqlite-autoconf-3320300.tar.gz | tar xzf -
Go into the created directory and create the Makefile with our system dependant options:
cd ./sqlite-autoconf-3320300 && ./configure
Build the binary
make
Install it
sudo make install
Clean up
cd .. && rm -r ./sqlite-autoconf-3320300
Note: It's far from ideal to do this without a proper RPM package. If you update sqlite through yum, you will overwrite you manually built version.
Adding on to #halbgut answer, with some changes:
Download the latest source code with the configure script from here. Currently this is:
curl https://www.sqlite.org/2020/sqlite-autoconf-3320300.tar.gz | tar xzf -
Go into the created directory and create the Makefile with our system dependent options:
cd ./sqlite-autoconf-3320300 && ./configure
Build the binary
make
Install it
sudo make install
Now, you have created the sqlite3 file. You need to replace them everywhere you find the file sqlite3.
To find all these places - run the following command:
whereis sqlite3
sqlite3: /usr/bin/sqlite3 /usr/local/bin/sqlite3 /usr/include/sqlite3.h /opt/c9/bin/sqlite3 /usr/share/man/man1/sqlite3.1.gz
Now within the sqlite source folder ./sqlite-autoconf-3320300, find the sqlite3, sqlite3.h files and replace with the following cp command
sudo cp sqlite-autoconf-3320300/sqlite3 /usr/local/bin/sqlite3
sudo cp sqlite-autoconf-3320300/sqlite3 /usr/local/bin/sqlite3
sudo cp sqlite-autoconf-3320300/sqlite3 /opt/c9/bin/sqlite3 {I am using c9, hence this file, figure out what file is in the opt/ dir)
sudo cp sqlite-autoconf-3320300/sqlite3.h /usr/include/sqlite3.h
Once done, you would have upgraded both env and python-env. Now you need to just define the path to it. For it, use the local/lib in usr.
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="/usr/local/lib"
Now you should have this :
$ python -c "import sqlite3; print(sqlite3.sqlite_version)"
3.23.3
$ sqlite3 --version
3.32.3
If you just need the sqlite3 binary, the SQLite amalgamation also works perfectly on Amazon Linux 2. For SQLite 33.9.04 (or others from the SQLite Download section):
wget "https://www.sqlite.org/2022/sqlite-amalgamation-3390400.zip"
unzip "sqlite-amalgamation-3390400.zip"
cd "sqlite-amalgamation-3390400"
gcc shell.c sqlite3.c -lpthread -ldl -lm -o sqlite3
And then use it as you would any other software compiled from source:
ln -n ./sqlite3 ${wherever}/sqlite3
export PATH="${wherever}:$PATH"
SQLite docs give a good explanation of further options if you need them.
Get the latest sqlite3 download link from https://www.sqlite.org/download.html
and update the link given in the WGET bash command example shown below.
Example:
wget https://www.sqlite.org/2022/sqlite-tools-linux-x86-3400000.zip
unzip sqlite-tools*.zip
cd sqlite-tools*
sudo cp sql* /usr/local/bin/ # Usually this directory is empty, so no need to worry about overwriting files
cd ~
sudo yum update -y
sudo amazon-linux-extras install epel -y
sudo yum install glibc.i686 -y
sqlite3 --version
I'm trying to get the PHP Core SDK to work without composer. There doesn't seem to be a simple way of working with the SDK without composer (https://github.com/paypal/sdk-core-php)
Any chance someone has an autoloader script or another solution to get this working?
I've been scanning for other information throughout the web, but it seems i'm the only person alive trying to get this to work without Composer.
Any chance? Thanks!
Alright, so it seems that i am really the only person on this planet who wants to do this. Well, then i'll answer my question myself. It seems like this is the guide for running every composer package without composer. Yihaa \o/. Probably easy stuff for most people using composer, but i've never used it because i'm on a shitty windows shared-host.
This is based on debian, but replace every apt-get with YUM for redhat or whatever.
So, i'm doing this in my root directory, don't whine about it :)
Ssh into your Linux Box (local mac or windows will work aswell but i'm not telling you)
# cd into the root directory (or user directory)
cd ~/
# install php5 and php5-curl and unzip (because the package we're
# getting is from GitHub). There might be other stuff your package is asking for.
# So just include it at the end
apt-get install php-5 php5-curl unzip
# install composer
curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php
# get the master archive
wget https://github.com/paypal/sdk-core-php/archive/master.zip
# unzip it
unzip master.zip
# cd into the directory
cd master
# move the files back to the ~/ directory
mv * ..
# remove the master directory
rm -r master
# install package using composer
php composer.phar install
# now we have the lib directory and the vendor directory. Lets tar that up
tar -cf package.tar lib/ vendor/
#we now have a tar file called package.tar copy that to your computer, ftp, whatever.
You can now create a directory in the place where you include all your stuff called lib-package (or whatever fancy name you'd like to call it) and add the following line in your project
require_once(/path/to/your/package/lib-package/vendor/autoload.php)
Voila, you're done.
I'm new in installing packages on server. On php.net it says how you can install rar package by hand (http://www.php.net/manual/en/rar.installation.php):
gunzip rar-xxx.tgz
tar -xvf rar-xxx.tar
cd rar-xxx
phpize
./configure && make && make install
I've downloaded the package and uploaded it to server. My question is, WHERE do I need to write the installation commands? I've tried in CMD but, of course, it doesn't work. Help? :)
You need SSH access to the Linux machine you want to install this on. By the sound of your comments you either don't have SSH access (shared hosts) or don't know how to use it.
If you have SSH access to the server you're working on use a program like PuTTY to establish an SSH connection to the server. Once you've logged in with your SSH credentials type these commands:
cd /tmp
wget http://pecl.php.net/get/rar-3.0.1.tgz
gunzip rar-3.0.1.tgz
tar -xvf rar-3.0.1.tar
cd rar-3.0.1
phpize
./configure && make && make install
I am trying to run the 'phpize' command on MacOSx Mountain Lion, but this is what I get:
Cannot find config.m4.
Make sure that you run '/opt/local/bin/phpize' in the top level source directory of the module
How do I resolve this error ?
The phpize command is meant to be run at the top level of an extension source dir (this source dir should contain a file name config.m4).
See http://php.net/manual/en/install.pecl.phpize.php for more information.
In plain English, it means you're running the command from the wrong directory. You need to be in the directory that contains the source for the extension you're trying to install.
For example, if you're trying to install mcrypt, like I was when I came across this stack overflow page, you need to be in php-5.6.24/ext/mcrypt and then run the command.
My problem was that I was trying to execute the command just to see if I had it installed.
Trying to execute the command alone gives you that error, only use it inside the directory (most likely you downloaded) that contains the extension that you're trying to install.
Here some instructions to install Xdebug for php7.2 for example.
Take special care in step 3 and 4, first you change dir to the unpacked downloaded extension and then you run phpize.
http://qiita.com/MasatoYoshioka#github/items/e542f39a6f1a3bc1f71e
In terminal
ls config.m4
ls config*
config.w32 config0.m4
cp config0.m4 config.m4
cd /usr/local/src/php-5.3.29/ext/zlib
phpize
./configure
make clean && make && make install
nano php.ini
add extension=zlib.so
got inside the xdebug folder than try to run the phpize
Sometimes, using the pecl installer is not an option. This could be because you're behind a firewall, or it could be because the extension you want to install is not available as a PECL compatible package, such as unreleased extensions from git. If you need to build such an extension, you can use the lower-level build tools to perform the build manually.
The phpize command is used to prepare the build environment for a PHP extension. In the following sample, the sources for an extension are in a directory named extname:
$ cd extname
$ phpize
$ ./configure
$ make
# make install
first run ./configure it will create config.m4 file, rest the steps are same