Magento export out of memory even via SSH - php

I have a relatively small store, about 20k skus all simple products. I'm using magento 1.7.2 but had the same problem with all the older versions. I simply cannot export my products to a CSV. Out of memory when running directly from the dataflow profiles in the magento backend and same error when running it from shell.
Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 536870912 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 71 bytes) in /home/public_html/app/code/core/Mage/Eav/Model/Entity/Attribute/Source/Table.php on line 62
I've increased the memory limits and execution times in magentos htaccess to 512m, magentos php.ini to 512m and my VPS php configuration ini to 512mb. it still burns through it in about 4 minutes and runs out of memory.
I'm so confused, my entire database (zipped) is only 28mb! what am I missing to make the magento export all products function work?

Magento dataflow does have a tendency to use massive amounts of memory making exports on large stores difficult. For stores with large product catalogues it is often a lot quicker and easier to write a script to export directly from the database rather than through dataflow.

This might be problem with your .htaccess file(s) aren’t overriding your memory_limit settings globally set in php.ini.
Other option is set memory_limit to unlimited in you index.php for testing. Then you will come to know whether changes in .htaccess is not getting effected or not.

I solved this problem by exporting 500, 1000 or as many as I wanted at a time (with a custom export script).
I made a file that received as parameters $start and $productsToExport. The file took the collection of products, and then used
LIMIT ($start-1)*$productsToExport, $productsToExport
This script only returned the number of products exported.
I made a second, master script that did a recursive AJAX to the first file, with the parameters $start = 0, $productsToExport = 500. When the AJAX was finished, it did the same with $start = 1, and so on, until no products are left.
The advantage of this is that it doesn't overload the server (one ajax is run only after the previous is finished) - and if an error occurs, the script continues. Also thememory_limit and max_execution_time are sa

If by 20k skus you mean 20.000 then this is totally possible. The export is very hungry for memory, unfortunately. I always increase the memory_limit to 2000M in this case and then it takes a while to create the file, but succeeds in the end.

Related

PHP running out of memory with Fatal error: Allowed memory size of X bytes exhausted (tried to allocate Y bytes)

I'm busy migrating a customer application written in PHP/MySQL from Hetzner to AWS. Everything works fine but a few scripts. These scripts are poorly written and loop through millions of records, creating hundreds of local variables in each run of the loop, writing each row to an excel file, opening another file, writing a status update and closing a file in each run of the loop. The script is spawned as an independent process using shell_exec from the main web application.
When I first tested the script on EC2, it crashed quite quickly as the php memory_limit parameter was set to 128M on my EC2 instance. The error was similar to the one below:
Fatal error: Allowed memory size of X bytes exhausted (tried to allocate Y bytes)
I increased the memory_limit from 128M to 256M, then to 512M, then to 1024M, 4096M and eventually set to -1 to see where the problem lies.
Setting it to -1 did initially seemed to work but it then froze the entire instance (t2.micro). I then realized it was because of lack of swap space that system memory limits are being reached so just for testing purposes, I added a swap space of 4GB and set memory_limit to -1. This did work as expected and the script never crashed but as the script ran, it became progressively slower. For instance, it wrote the first 10% of records to excel file much faster than the 10% after 50%. All this while I watched the memory usage expand to 6 GB.
Below are screenshots from htop while the script was running:
I'm using the default php.ini that comes php installation except for memory_limit which is set to -1.
However, when I run this very same script on another server (Hetzner shared hosting in this case), the server somehow limits the memory usage and the script runs fine on 128M of memory_limit setting. Although this is not entirely true (as confirmed by htop on the server), it seems like it does not crash on the server with much less memory/swap space than on my EC2 instance.
Below are screenshots from htop running on Hetzner:
The third screenshot was taken towards the end of the script - and as you can see the memory didn't change much between when it started and the end. Here's the php.ini settings from the server:
display_errors=1
memory_limit=128M
max_execution_time=90
max_input_vars=3500
upload_max_filesize=64M
post_max_size=64M
allow_url_fopen=0
The database and code base are exact replicas in both instances.The resultant excel file size is about 225MB in both cases.
So, any ideas what might be causing this behavior and how should I go about fixing it on my EC2 instance?
Thank you for your help!
EasyPHP-Devserver-17-depanne-erreur Fatal error: Allowed memory size
of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 471698889 bytes) in
C:\Program Files
(x86)\EasyPHP-Devserver-17\eds-binaries\httpserver\apache2425vc11x86x180705170153\eds-app-dashboard.php
on line 77
SOLUTION
In my case, it was because Easyphp was trying to load a too large error.log file.
Deleting the server log file in eds-binaries\httpserver\apache2418x160331124251\logs
Test ok

CSV script upload fails

I have a Wordrpess with a custom import script for csv. The file I want to import it has 24 MB and 12000 products. At over 10500 products the script stops.
It worked until I reached this number or products.
Here is my configuration:
upload_max_filesize 500 M
post_max_size 500 M
max_execution_time 18000
max_input_time 18000
wait_timeout 60
What do I need to change?
If you get any imports at all, it means that upload limitations are not to blame. If you were hitting those, none of the import would take place.
The two most probably "candidates" are: execution time was hit or memory limit was reached.
For the former, you already have max_execution_time set to quite a large number and I assume your input script is not taking that long. (correct me if I'm wrong)
So the most obvious one is that your script reaches memory_limit then just halts, hence incomplete import.
If increasing the memory_limit doe not help, you will need to enable error reporting in order to find out what's going on.
To do that in WordPress, simply enable debug mode by adding the following line in your wp-config.php:
define('WP_DEBUG', true);
Optional side note
Having said that, importing large amounts of data by way of unreasonably increasing allowed resources is probably not the right way to go.
Try implementing incremental imports. I.e. the receiving script just parses submitted data, then uses AJAX to do import one by one. Or import submission form takes index parameters (import records 0 to 1000), etc.
Allowing a lot of resources taken by PHP is asking for trouble. Malicious users can exploit that to easily bring your website down.

Restful codeigniter limitation with files?

I use PhilSturgeon RestFul libraries (Client and Server).
I want to download a file from my client, it works with a lot of files, but when the file is big (>= 6 Mo), I get a blank page with no error.
Can I handle big files with this system ? My code si simply :
$data = file_get_contents('my_big_file.bmp');
$this->response(base64_encode($data), 200);
I didn't find any configuration dealing with timeouts or execution times in both libraries.
Yes, you can. The problem you will face is that your servers RAM will get to it's max quickly if the file is too big and probably if the file takes a lot of processing time the script will time out. This has to do with your php.ini settings.
To fix this open your php.ini and change "max_execution_time" to the seconds you want. 0 is unlimited but that isn't good on a production level so set a time you think it will take. If you want to be able to process files bigger than 128MB change the "memory_limit" to something higher.
It is also possible to set these via your php script/controller with http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.ini-set.php e.g.
ini_set('memory_limit', '256M'); //Sets the memory_limit on 256MB
ini_set('max_execution_time', '900'); //Sets the max_execution_time to 900 seconds (15 minutes)

PhpMyAdmin timeout with large SQL import error

When I try to paste a large(5000 lines) sql file into PhpMyAdmin, I get this error? I know I can use the upload but on my old version of PhpMyAdmin this used to work without a problem.
ALERT - configured request variable value length limit exceeded - dropped variable
'sql_query' (attacker '111.171.123.123', file '/usr/share/apache2/phpmyadmin/import.php'),
referer: https://example.co.uk/phpmyadmin/db_sql.php?db=test&server=1&
token=0f355f8bbc6fc09d5c512e0409e9cac9&db_query_force=1
I have already tried changing the $cfg['ExecTimeLimit'] = 0;
php.ini
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
; Resource Limits ;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
; Maximum execution time of each script, in seconds
max_execution_time = 120
; Maximum amount of time each script may spend parsing request data
max_input_time = 60
;max_input_nesting_level = 64 ; Maximum input variable nesting level
;Maximum amount of memory a script may consume (128MB)
memory_limit = 100M
As far as I'm concerned this message means that Suhosin (a security patch for PHP) is blocking your request because of its length. The simplest way to solve your problem without changing Suhosin's config - is to import a file with the same SQL statements to PHPMyAdmin (it allows uploading files for import).
So basically all you need - is to create a simple text file, paste the same SQL statements into it, and upload this file to PHPMyAdmin - it has the appropriate page for such imports.
If you really want to use PhpMyAdmin try using the version 3.4.3.2 or higher as I am not sure if yours version has got this
Partial import
Allow the interruption of an import in case the script detects it is close to the PHP timeout limit. (This might be good way to import large files, however it can break transactions.)
http://www.phpmyadmin.net/home_page/index.php
I hope it helps.

Fatal Error: Allowed Memory Size of 134217728 Bytes Exhausted (CodeIgniter + XML-RPC)

I have a bunch of client point of sale (POS) systems that periodically send new sales data to one centralized database, which stores the data into one big database for report generation.
The client POS is based on PHPPOS, and I have implemented a module that uses the standard XML-RPC library to send sales data to the service. The server system is built on CodeIgniter, and uses the XML-RPC and XML-RPCS libraries for the webservice component. Whenever I send a lot of sales data (as little as 50 rows from the sales table, and individual rows from sales_items pertaining to each item within the sale) I get the following error:
Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 54 bytes)
128M is the default value in php.ini, but I assume that is a huge number to break. In fact, I have even tried setting this value to 1024M, and all it does is take a longer time to error out.
As for steps I've taken, I've tried disabling all processing on the server-side, and have rigged it to return a canned response regardless of the input. However, I believe the problem lies in the actual sending of the data. I've even tried disabling the maximum script execution time for PHP, and it still errors out.
Changing the memory_limit by ini_set('memory_limit', '-1'); is not a proper solution. Please don't do that.
Your PHP code may have a memory leak somewhere and you are telling the server to just use all the memory that it wants. You wouldn't have fixed the problem at all. If you monitor your server, you will see that it is now probably using up most of the RAM and even swapping to disk.
You should probably try to track down the offending code in your code and fix it.
ini_set('memory_limit', '-1'); overrides the default PHP memory limit.
The correct way is to edit your php.ini file.
Edit memory_limit to your desire value.
As from your question, 128M (which is the default limit) has been exceeded, so there is something seriously wrong with your code as it should not take that much.
If you know why it takes that much and you want to allow it set memory_limit = 512M or higher and you should be good.
The memory allocation for PHP can be adjusted permanently, or temporarily.
Permanently
You can permanently change the PHP memory allocation two ways.
If you have access to your php.ini file, you can edit the value for memory_limit to your desire value.
If you do not have access to your php.ini file (and your webhost allows it), you can override the memory allocation through your .htaccess file. Add php_value memory_limit 128M (or whatever your desired allocation is).
Temporary
You can adjust the memory allocation on the fly from within a PHP file. You simply have the code ini_set('memory_limit', '128M'); (or whatever your desired allocation is). You can remove the memory limit (although machine or instance limits may still apply) by setting the value to "-1".
It's very easy to get memory leaks in a PHP script - especially if you use abstraction, such as an ORM. Try using Xdebug to profile your script and find out where all that memory went.
When adding 22.5 million records into an array with array_push I kept getting "memory exhausted" fatal errors at around 20M records using 4G as the memory limit in file php.ini. To fix this, I added the statement
$old = ini_set('memory_limit', '8192M');
at the top of the file. Now everything is working fine. I do not know if PHP has a memory leak. That is not my job, nor do I care. I just have to get my job done, and this worked.
The program is very simple:
$fh = fopen($myfile);
while (!feof($fh)) {
array_push($file, stripslashes(fgets($fh)));
}
fclose($fh);
The fatal error points to line 3 until I boosted the memory limit, which
eliminated the error.
I kept getting this error, even with memory_limit set in php.ini, and the value reading out correctly with phpinfo().
By changing it from this:
memory_limit=4G
To this:
memory_limit=4096M
This rectified the problem in PHP 7.
You can properly fix this by changing memory_limit on fastcgi/fpm:
$vim /etc/php5/fpm/php.ini
Change memory, like from 128 to 512, see below
; Maximum amount of memory a script may consume (128 MB)
; http://php.net/memory-limit
memory_limit = 128M
to
; Maximum amount of memory a script may consume (128 MB)
; http://php.net/memory-limit
memory_limit = 512M
When you see the above error - especially if the (tried to allocate __ bytes) is a low value, that could be an indicator of an infinite loop, like a function that calls itself with no way out:
function exhaustYourBytes()
{
return exhaustYourBytes();
}
Your site's root directory:
ini_set('memory_limit', '1024M');
After enabling these two lines, it started working:
; Determines the size of the realpath cache to be used by PHP. This value should
; be increased on systems where PHP opens many files to reflect the quantity of
; the file operations performed.
; http://php.net/realpath-cache-size
realpath_cache_size = 16k
; Duration of time, in seconds for which to cache realpath information for a given
; file or directory. For systems with rarely changing files, consider increasing this
; value.
; http://php.net/realpath-cache-ttl
realpath_cache_ttl = 120
Rather than changing the memory_limit value in your php.ini file, if there's a part of your code that could use a lot of memory, you could remove the memory_limit before that section runs, and then replace it after.
$limit = ini_get('memory_limit');
ini_set('memory_limit', -1);
// ... do heavy stuff
ini_set('memory_limit', $limit);
In Drupal 7, you can modify the memory limit in the settings.php file located in your sites/default folder. Around line 260, you'll see this:
ini_set('memory_limit', '128M');
Even if your php.ini settings are high enough, you won't be able to consume more than 128 MB if this isn't set in your Drupal settings.php file.
Change the memory limit in the php.ini file and restart Apache. After the restart, run the phpinfo(); function from any PHP file for a memory_limit change confirmation.
memory_limit = -1
Memory limit -1 means there is no memory limit set. It's now at the maximum.
Just add a ini_set('memory_limit', '-1'); line at the top of your web page.
And you can set your memory as per your need in the place of -1, to 16M, etc..
For Drupal users, this Chris Lane's answer of:
ini_set('memory_limit', '-1');
works but we need to put it just after the opening
<?php
tag in the index.php file in your site's root directory.
PHP 5.3+ allows you to change the memory limit by placing a .user.ini file in the public_html folder.
Simply create the above file and type the following line in it:
memory_limit = 64M
Some cPanel hosts only accept this method.
Crash page?
(It happens when MySQL has to query large rows. By default, memory_limit is set to small, which was safer for the hardware.)
You can check your system existing memory status, before increasing php.ini:
# free -m
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 64457 63791 666 0 1118 18273
-/+ buffers/cache: 44398 20058
Swap: 1021 0 1021
Here I have increased it as in the following and then do service httpd restart to fix the crash page issue.
# grep memory_limit /etc/php.ini
memory_limit = 512M
For those who are scratching their heads to find out why on earth this little function should cause a memory leak, sometimes by a little mistake, a function starts recursively call itself for ever.
For example, a proxy class that has the same name for a function of the object that is going to proxy it.
class Proxy {
private $actualObject;
public function doSomething() {
return $this->actualObjec->doSomething();
}
}
Sometimes you may forget to bring that little actualObjec member and because the proxy actually has that doSomething method, PHP wouldn't give you any error and for a large class, it could be hidden from the eyes for a couple of minutes to find out why it is leaking the memory.
I had the error below while running on a dataset smaller than had worked previously.
Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 134217728 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 4096 bytes) in C:\workspace\image_management.php on line 173
As the search for the fault brought me here, I thought I'd mention that it's not always the technical solutions in previous answers, but something more simple. In my case it was Firefox. Before I ran the program it was already using 1,157 MB.
It turns out that I'd been watching a 50 minute video a bit at a time over a period of days and that messed things up. It's the sort of fix that experts correct without even thinking about it, but for the likes of me it's worth bearing in mind.
In my case on mac (Catalina - Xampp) there was no loaded file so I had to do this first.
sudo cp /etc/php.ini.default /etc/php.ini
sudo nano /etc/php.ini
Then change memory_limit = 512M
Then Restart Apache and check if file loaded
php -i | grep php.ini
Result was
Configuration File (php.ini) Path => /etc
Loaded Configuration File => /etc/php.ini
Finally Check
php -r "echo ini_get('memory_limit').PHP_EOL;"
Using yield might be a solution as well. See Generator syntax.
Instead of changing the PHP.ini file for a bigger memory storage, sometimes implementing a yield inside a loop might fix the issue. What yield does is instead of dumping all the data at once, it reads it one by one, saving a lot of memory usage.
The reason for this error is that your server configuration has a very low memory limit. Try adding this to wp-config.php (put it after <?php in this file):
define('WP_MEMORY_LIMIT', '96M');
Please note that this limit is OK for the theme and the plugins that come with the theme. If you want to enable other plugins you may need to increase the limit further.
define('WP_MEMORY_LIMIT', '256M');
Running the script like this (cron case for example): php5 /pathToScript/info.php produces the same error.
The correct way: php5 -cli /pathToScript/info.php
If you're running a WHM-powered VPS (virtual private server) you may find that you do not have permissions to edit PHP.INI directly; the system must do it. In the WHM host control panel, go to Service Configuration → PHP Configuration Editor and modify memory_limit:
I find it useful when including or requiring _dbconnection.php_ and _functions.php in files that are actually processed, rather than including in the header. Which is included in itself.
So if your header and footer is included, simply include all your functional files before the header is included.
Greetings is a very common problem because if you have very little memory allocated to php and your website is growing will require more resources.
I found myself in a site that had problems that gave error 500 to modify only some products, the problem was that they had used very heavy images in those specific products, solution:
1.- Increase "memory_limit" in php.ini
2.- Lower the weight of the images.
3.- Adapt again "memory_limit" to an acceptable value "512M" at least for me more than enough.
now it is important that you verify that the changes are being made because php apart from having several versions and several types of installations on the server, maybe you modify one and it does not work and this is because you are not modifying the correct php.ini file.
How do you verify that you are modifying the correct file?
In the prestashop dashboard go to advanced settings/information there you can see "Memory limit".
always remember that after making a change in the php.ini file it is advisable to restart apache or Nginx.
Ubuntu: sudo services apache2 restart
IMPORTANT NOTE: Never set the "memory_limit = -1" as many people mention here. The problem is that if you have a problem with a file or module you could be in a continuous loop consuming all the server's memory and processor. Let's take a simple example: a module has an error and makes a call to a function and until it is not positive it keeps calling, this will create an infinite loop and it will never stop doing it because php has no limit.
I hope it helps colleagues who have this problem.
The most common cause of this error message for me is omitting the "++" operator from a PHP "for" statement. This causes the loop to continue forever, no matter how much memory you allow to be used. It is a simple syntax error, yet is difficult for the compiler or runtime system to detect. It is easy for us to correct if we think to look for it!
But suppose you want a general procedure for stopping such a loop early and reporting the error? You can simply instrument each of your loops (or at least the innermost loops) as discussed below.
In some cases such as recursion inside exceptions, set_time_limit fails, and the browser keeps trying to load the PHP output, either with an infinite loop or with the fatal error message which is the topic of this question.
By reducing the allowed allocation size near the beginning of your code you might be able to prevent the fatal error, as discussed in the other answers.
Then you may be left with a program that terminates, but is still difficult to debug.
Whether or not your program terminates, instrument your code by inserting BreakLoop() calls inside your program to gain control and find out what loop or recursion in your program is causing the problem.
The definition of BreakLoop is as follows:
function BreakLoop($MaxRepetitions=500,$LoopSite="unspecified")
{
static $Sites=[];
if (!#$Sites[$LoopSite] || !$MaxRepetitions)
$Sites[$LoopSite]=['n'=>0, 'if'=>0];
if (!$MaxRepetitions)
return;
if (++$Sites[$LoopSite]['n'] >= $MaxRepetitions)
{
$S=debug_backtrace(); // array_reverse
$info=$S[0];
$File=$info['file'];
$Line=$info['line'];
exit("*** Loop for site $LoopSite was interrupted after $MaxRepetitions repetitions. In file $File at line $Line.");
}
} // BreakLoop
The $LoopSite argument can be the name of a function in your code. It isn't really necessary, since the error message you will get will point you to the line containing the BreakLoop() call.
In my case it was a brief issue with the way a function was written. A memory leak can be caused by assigning a new value to a function's input variable, e.g.:
/**
* Memory leak function that illustrates unintentional bad code
* #param $variable - input function that will be assigned a new value
* #return null
**/
function doSomehting($variable){
$variable = 'set value';
// Or
$variable .= 'set value';
}
Increasing the memory_limit fixed the problem. However, I had problems finding the memory limit. I am working on my project directly from live server, so if you're doing the same, on cPanel you can find the memory_limit if you go to Software - MultiPHP INI Editor and select the location. I increased mine from 256M to 512M. You can also find instructions here.

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