Run .exe in web app and real-time communication with this .exe - php

My PHP web app receives data from a stream. Once the page is loaded I need to open an .exe file using system() or exec() and after short period of time new data will come, so I must type specific command to this .exe to get its returned value, how can I do this?
I'm only able to do this manually in command prompt
path/to/.exe :: hit 'Enter'
command1 params1
//...

What you're looking for is proc_open(). http://php.net/manual/en/function.proc-open.php
This will allow you to work with STDIO streams to communicate with the separate process.
Example from the PHP documentation:
$descriptorspec = array(
0 => array("pipe", "r"), // stdin is a pipe that the child will read from
1 => array("pipe", "w"), // stdout is a pipe that the child will write to
2 => array("file", "/tmp/error-output.txt", "a") // stderr is a file to write to
);
$cwd = '/tmp';
$env = array('some_option' => 'aeiou');
$process = proc_open('php', $descriptorspec, $pipes, $cwd, $env);
if (is_resource($process)) {
// $pipes now looks like this:
// 0 => writeable handle connected to child stdin
// 1 => readable handle connected to child stdout
// Any error output will be appended to /tmp/error-output.txt
fwrite($pipes[0], '<?php print_r($_ENV); ?>');
fclose($pipes[0]);
echo stream_get_contents($pipes[1]);
fclose($pipes[1]);
// It is important that you close any pipes before calling
// proc_close in order to avoid a deadlock
$return_value = proc_close($process);
echo "command returned $return_value\n";
}

You could also consider shared memory if you need more than one listener, but this scenario sounds like you would benefit from using a queue.
Documentation msg_get_queue, msg_receive, msg_send
Example
// Send
if (msg_queue_exists(12345)) {
$mqh = msg_get_queue(12345);
$result = msg_send($mqh , 1, 'data', true);
}
// Receive
$mqh = msg_get_queue(12345, 0666);
$mqst = msg_stat_queue($mqh);
while ($mqst['msg_qnum']) {
msg_receive($mqh, 0, $msgtype, 2048, $data, true);
// Spawn your process
$mqst = msg_stat_queue($mqh);
}
Edit
Semaphore functions aren't available on Windows, as suggested above your best bet is to go with popen (unidirectional) or proc_open for bi-directional support.

Related

PHP - `shell_exec` not working with NMap (Windows Server)

I've been trying to figure out why I can't get NMap to give me any sort of output nor even work for that matter via PHP.
Things I've tried so far:
// this doesn't return anything because it's wrong
$output = passthru('nmap -V');
echo $output;
// this returns a negated integer value
passthru('nmap -V', $output);
echo $output;
// this doesn't return anything either
$stream = popen('C:\nmap -V', 'r');
while (!feof($stream))
{
$buffer = fread($stream, 1024);
echo $buffer;
}
pclose($stream);
// this doesn't do anything as well
$output = system('C:\nmap -V');
echo $output;
// this does nothing also...
ob_start(); // start output buffering
fpassthru('C:\nmap -V'); // flush COMPLETE output of nmap
$output = ob_get_contents(); // capture output buffer contents
ob_end_clean(); // shutdown output buffers
echo $output; // echo it
.
// okay, how about we try a 'proc_open()'?
// nope, this doesn't work either. I just get a value of "command returned -1073741515"
$descriptorspec = array(
0 => array("pipe", "r"), // stdin is a pipe that the child will read from
1 => array("pipe", "w"), // stdout is a pipe that the child will write to
2 => array("file", "errors/errors.txt", "a") // stderr is a file to write to
);
$cwd = 'errors';
$env = array('some_option' => 'aeiou');
$process = proc_open('C:/nmap -V', $descriptorspec, $pipes, $cwd, $env);
if (is_resource($process))
{
// $pipes now looks like this:
// 0 => writeable handle connected to child stdin
// 1 => readable handle connected to child stdout
// Any error output will be appended to /errors/errors.txt
fwrite($pipes[0], '<?php print_r($_ENV); ?>');
fclose($pipes[0]);
echo stream_get_contents($pipes[1]);
fclose($pipes[1]);
// It is important that you close any pipes before calling
// proc_close in order to avoid a deadlock
$return_value = proc_close($process);
echo "command returned $return_value\n";
}
And many others, but I get absolutely NOTHING back from $output. I've done a lot of Google searching too, but I still can't figure it out. Many examples also seem to be for Linux which doesn't help.
Thanks.
Okay, I get an output using this code. I will continue coding and finish the rest of the program. Thanks to 'Chris Haas' for the suggestion in using proc_open
NOTE: The directory that contains the 'errors.txt' file must have 'IIS_IUSRS' write permissions. When in doubt, check your PHP error log.
$descriptorSpec = array(
0 => array("pipe", "r"), // stdin is a pipe that the child will read from
1 => array("pipe", "w"), // stdout is a pipe that the child will write to
2 => array("file", "errors/errors.txt", "a") // stderr is a file to write to
);
$env = array('bypass_shell' => true);
$process = proc_open("NMAP.EXE -V", $descriptorSpec, $pipes, "C:\\Program Files (x86)\\NMap", $env);
if (is_resource($process))
{
// '$pipes' now looks like this:
// 0 => writeable handle connected to child stdin
// 1 => readable handle connected to child stdout
fwrite($pipes[0], '<?php print_r($_ENV); ?>');
fclose($pipes[0]);
echo stream_get_contents($pipes[1]);
fclose($pipes[1]);
// it is important that you close any pipes before calling
// proc_close in order to avoid a deadlock
$return_value = proc_close($process);
echo "<br /><br />Command Returned: $return_value\n";
}
Nmap version 7.91 ( https://nmap.org ) Platform:
i686-pc-windows-windows Compiled with: nmap-liblua-5.3.5
openssl-1.1.1h nmap-libssh2-1.9.0 nmap-libz-1.2.11 nmap-libpcre-7.6
Npcap-1.00 nmap-libdnet-1.12 ipv6 Compiled without: Available nsock
engines: iocp poll select
Command Returned: 0

php -> fwrite to process pipe hangs -> why?

Can anyone say, why the following code hangs on fwrite($pipes[0], $data);, but it does not hang when I change $bytesCount to, for example, 1000?
I was not able to find answer via google :(
Thank you.
$descriptorspec = array(
0 => array("pipe", "r"),
1 => array("pipe", "w")
);
$bytesCount = 1000000;
$process = proc_open('cat', $descriptorspec, $pipes);
$data = str_repeat('a', $bytesCount);
fwrite($pipes[0], $data);
fclose($pipes[0]);
$response = stream_get_contents($pipes[1]);
fclose($pipes[1]);
$return_value = proc_close($process);
Pipes are implemented with input and output buffers. cat starts to read, and copies everything to the output. When the output buffer is full, its write is blocked.
Since nothing is reading cat's input (as that line is never reached), it will block indefinitely, blocking your fwrite.

Environment is not passed to process opened by proc_open

I have a problem passing environment variables to processes that i opened with proc_open.
I found the following example on http://us2.php.net/manual/en/function.proc-open.php
<?php
$descriptorspec = array(
0 => array("pipe", "r"), // stdin is a pipe that the child will read from
1 => array("pipe", "w"), // stdout is a pipe that the child will write to
2 => array("file", "/tmp/error-output.txt", "a") // stderr is a file to write to
);
$cwd = '/tmp';
$env = array('some_option' => 'aeiou');
$process = proc_open('php', $descriptorspec, $pipes, $cwd, $env);
if (is_resource($process)) {
// $pipes now looks like this:
// 0 => writeable handle connected to child stdin
// 1 => readable handle connected to child stdout
// Any error output will be appended to /tmp/error-output.txt
fwrite($pipes[0], '<?php print_r($_ENV); ?>');
fclose($pipes[0]);
echo stream_get_contents($pipes[1]);
fclose($pipes[1]);
// It is important that you close any pipes before calling
// proc_close in order to avoid a deadlock
$return_value = proc_close($process);
echo "command returned $return_value\n";
}
?>
The example should echo the env array like the documentation say. But on my machine (PHP 5.4.6-1ubuntu1.4 (cli)) the echoed array is empty. Are there some Suhosin or php.ini restrictions that ban env var passing to processes? I have no idea.
If $_ENV is empty, you should have a look at your variables_order ini setting and ensure that the value contains the E
However, you can use $_SERVER instead:
fwrite($pipes[0], '<?php print_r($_SERVER); ?>');
It will contain environment variables too and should be enabled at 99.999% of servers (I guess)
Set
variables_order = "EGPCS"
in your php.ini

PHP SVN update - TortoiseSVN

New code:
<?php
exec('"C:\Program Files\TortoiseSVN\bin\svn.exe" update "c:\wamp\www\project"');
This results in an infinite loop, no result is returned. What am I doing wrong?
== edit ==
On Windows, I'm trying to update a project by using PHP. I'm having problems using the commandline: I want visual feedback (important in case of conflicts), so I don't want to start as a background process. Is this possible?
The code I have so far is:
<?php
$todo = "cd \"C:\\Program Files\\TortoiseSVN\\bin\\\"";
$todo2 = "START TortoiseProc.exe /command:update /path:\"C:\\wamp\\www\\project\\\" /closeonend:0";
pclose(popen($todo, "r"));
pclose(popen($todo2, "r"));
I would drop exec and use proc_open (see http://php.net/manual/en/function.proc-open.php)
Here's an example I quickly whipped up and which should work for you:
<?php
// setup pipes that you'll use
$descriptorspec = array(
0 => array("pipe", "r"), // stdin
1 => array("pipe", "w"), // stdout
2 => array("pipe", "w") // stderr
);
// call your process
$process = proc_open('"C:\Program Files\TortoiseSVN\bin\svn.exe" update "c:\wamp\www\project"',
$descriptorspec,
$pipes);
// if process is called, pipe data to variables which can later be processed.
if(is_resource($process))
{
$stdin = stream_get_contents($pipes[0]);
$stdout = stream_get_contents($pipes[1]);
$stderr = stream_get_contents($pipes[2]);
fclose($pipes[0]);
fclose($pipes[1]);
fclose($pipes[2]);
$return_value = proc_close($process);
}
// Now it's up to you what you want to do with the data you've got.
// Remember that this is merely an example, you'll probably want to
// modify the output handling to your own likings...
header('Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8');
// check if there was an error, if not - dump the data
if($return_value === -1)
{
echo('The termination status of the process indicates an error.'."\r\n");
}
echo('---------------------------------'."\r\n".'STDIN contains:'."\r\n");
echo($stdin);
echo('---------------------------------'."\r\n".'STDOUTcontains:'."\r\n");
echo($stdout);
echo('---------------------------------'."\r\n".'STDERR contains:'."\r\n");
echo($stderr);
?>
Aside:
The line
// call your process
$process = proc_open('"C:\Program Files\TortoiseSVN\bin\svn.exe" update "c:\wamp\www\project"',
$descriptorspec,
$pipes);
could also be escaped like this
// call your process
$process = proc_open("\"C:\\Program Files\\TortoiseSVN\\bin\\svn.exe\" update \"c:\\wamp\\www\\project\"",
$descriptorspec,
$pipes);
which might or might not solve some problems on some systems that have hickups with the single brackets (') and spaces () in the notation.

Capture stderr output from a proc_open() on windows

I'm invoking the proc_open() and I can't capture the output of the process written to the stderr:
$curFolder = getcwd();
$procDescriptor = array( 2 => array( "pipe", "w" ) );
$cmd = "MyApp.exe -f optimization.csv";
$process = proc_open( $cmd, $procDescriptor, $pipes, $curFolder );
if( is_resource( $process ) == true )
{
$procStatus = proc_get_status( $process );
while( $procStatus['running'] === true )
{
if( !feof( $pipes[2] ) )
{
$logLine = fgets( $pipes[2] );
echo( "Read >${logLine}<" );
}
sleep( 1 );
}
}
The program hangs on the fgets(). If I run the program from the command line, everything works, i.e. there is something written to the stderr (and I also tried by using the stdout with the same result). I'm running the script on Windows - the same script on Linux runs smoothly.
You have an endless loop.
$procStatus['running'] will never change unless you put the call to proc_get_status() inside the loop. PHP does not have dynamic properties like JavaScript.
I added the line
$procStatus = proc_get_status( $process );
right after the sleep() and it works fine.
From the proc_open() docs:
<?php
$descriptorspec = array(
0 => array("pipe", "r"), // stdin is a pipe that the child will read from
1 => array("pipe", "w"), // stdout is a pipe that the child will write to
2 => array("file", "/tmp/error-output.txt", "a") // stderr is a file to write to
);
$cwd = '/tmp';
$env = array('some_option' => 'aeiou');
$process = proc_open('php', $descriptorspec, $pipes, $cwd, $env);
if (is_resource($process)) {
// $pipes now looks like this:
// 0 => writeable handle connected to child stdin
// 1 => readable handle connected to child stdout
// Any error output will be appended to /tmp/error-output.txt
fwrite($pipes[0], '<?php print_r($_ENV); ?>');
fclose($pipes[0]);
echo stream_get_contents($pipes[1]);
fclose($pipes[1]);
// It is important that you close any pipes before calling
// proc_close in order to avoid a deadlock
$return_value = proc_close($process);
echo "command returned $return_value\n";
}
?>
Perhaps your process doesn't report to stderr if you find it empty
I'd recommend also adding stdin and stdout streams, even if you don't consume the data; some C libraries get into a tizzy if the streams are not there, and can either exit early (glibc) or potentially wedge (some versions of MS libc).

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