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Fatal error: Class 'XSLTProcessor' not found
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Closed 8 years ago.
I'm trying to transform a XML file to a HTML output with XSLT..
My code is as following:
<?php
$xml = new DOMDocument;
$xml->load('file.xml');
$xsl = new DOMDocument;
$xsl->load('file.xsl');
$proc = new XSLTProcessor;
$proc->importStyleSheet($xsl);
echo $proc->transformToXML($xml);
?>
But I'm getting the error: Fatal error: Class 'XSLTProcessor' not found
I know this has something to do with the fact dat the xsltprocessor is not compiled with PHP on my server... But I can't seem to find a way to enable it. (I do not control the server, but my hosting does)
Just install : sudo apt-get install php5-xsl
AND RESTART your APACHE Server ;)
I do not control the server
The PHP XSL extension can only be installed and enabled by the sysadmin.
While it's compiled by default, it is usually not installed by default when the server is using a pre-packaged version of PHP. Ask your host to install the php-xml package if you're on a *nix. If you're hosting on Windows, it becomes a bit more involved, as it requires finding the right .dll file (which may or may not be included in the official distribution) and editing php.ini.
With apache2/php5, you need the php5-xsl extension installed and enabled.
http://php.net/manual/en/book.xsl.php gives information on how to install the xsl extension. To enable, put the line "extension=php_xsl.so" in your php.ini file.
If it's still not working, create a new .php file on your server containing the line "". Load the file you just created, and search for "xsl" to see if the extension is actually being loaded.
Its necessary install the XLS extension.
My solution by my context.
I'm using one docker container contain ubuntu base and using php-fpm (ie if you simply already use linux ubuntu in the same).
The steps to install this extension in my context were:
First search xsl extension on linux repository
sudo apt-cache search xsl
I ended up finding the php5-xsl, so it was only install
sudo apt-get install php5-xsl
that the installation process the setup configuration is already added, if does not happen, just make yourself
sudo vim /etc/php5/mods-available/xsl.ini
insert this content:
extension=xsl.so
(obviously the paths are according to your php configuration settings, but my example is the default configuration)
Restart you php fpm and done (sudo service php5-fpm restart)!
If your php environment is on linux you can probably enable the php extension by using this command:
yum install php-xml
If it is a windows system, you can go into your php.ini config file and uncomment the php_xml.dll extension.
Hope that helps. A quick google search can answer questions like these in the future btw.
Related
I am trying to enable XSL on Ubuntu 12.04 but its failing. I did this locally on my Ubuntu 13.04 and it was successful. Basically the following worked on my local computer.
apt-get install php5_xsl
edit php.ini file and add extension=php5_xsl.so
restart apache
I repeated the same procedures on my production server running Ubuntu 12.04 and PHP version 5.5.12 but the extension is not getting loaded from the phpinfo. I have also changed the extension=php5_xsl.so to extension=xsl.so because this is what in the extension directory.
I read that I might need to recompile PHP but I am not sure of this steps.
Try this:
sudo apt-get install php5-xsl
sudo php5enmod xsl
sudo service apache2 restart
Why:
http://www.lornajane.net/posts/2012/managing-php-5-4-extensions-on-ubuntu
What's happened here is that all debian-flavoured unixes have adopted
this standard for their PHP 5.4 packages, so if you're using debian,
ubuntu, or any of their relatives with PHP 5.4, you'll see a directory
structure like this. When you add a module to PHP, you'll add a file
to the mods-available directory enabling the module and adding any
config specific to it. If you want to enable the module, just do:
php5enmod http
This simply creates a symlink from the usual conf.d directory to point
to where the real files are in mods-available, prefixed with a number
that indicates the priority of the module. By default, the priority is
20.
Using this approach means we can toggle things on and off without
commenting out big chunks of config files and leaving them lying
around - if this seems familiar then that's no surprise; debian-like
linuxes manage their apache configuration in just the same way. Any
packages that you install using aptitude will use these exact same
commands to set up the configuration and then symlink it correctly. To
unlink, use the delightfully predictably-named php5dismod :)
I'm trying to install orocrm on centos server and it is asking for PHP 5.4 and ICU library 4.4. Although I updated PHP and restarted Apache my php version still shows PHP 5.3 if outputting phpinfo in a php page. But,if I use php -v command then it shows php 5.5
ini path is shown /usr/local/lib/php.ini if using php page but through command it shows /etc/php.ini
please help...
The PHP 5.4 you compiled is not getting picked up by Apache. Rather than figuring out how to point Apache to this installation, the easiest (and safer since you'll get security updates) is to use the IUS Community repository
I have a couple of thoughts. If you're on CentOS you're probably using YUM as your package manager. With it, you could remove the PHP's and add a new one (if you don't have active clients using it). You can search what PHP version yum has by doing one of these:
yum list
yum list installed
If it registers multiple versions, you can "yum remove $package".
If you're php -v showing version 5.5, then your path is set to include that. You can see that by typing $PATH from the command line when SSH'd in. In your ~/.bashrc (or ~/.profile) you can edit your $PATH by adding something like:
export PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
EDIT: You should back up your PATH before writing a new one and after you edit it type "source ~/.bashrc" or "source ~/.profile" to make the command line see it.
You can also directly edit the php in the .bashrc to point to the correct version by setting up an alias (if you don't fix the root of the problem) like
alias php="/path/to/php"
You can see where your current php is by typing:
which php
Your PHP extension comes from the apache httpd.conf file. You can find it somewhere like /etc/apache2/httpd.conf. Search for "LoadModule" or "LoadModule php" and see which extension of PHP your apache is pointing to. It may still be pointing to an incorrect version.
To answer your question about ICU, it comes from the "intl" extension. With yum, this is probably called php-intl or php54-intl or php54w-intl. You can do something like "yum search intl" and it should give you the exact extension name.
I hope this helps!
I'm trying to set up a cronjob which requires curl, and I'm calling it directly from crontab with
* * * * * /usr/bin/php myurl/my_cron.php
The problem is, it looks like the curl module isn't installed for my phpcli.
It works just fine when I hit the url from my browser, but when I run
php -q myfile.php
from the command line, it returns
PHP Fatal error: Call to undefined function curl_init() in my_cron.php on line 20
When I run php -m the curl module does not show up. However when I go to the browser and dump the php_info(), the module shows up and says its correctly installed.
The other kicker is i've been trying to install curl with apt-get onto the server (Ubuntu 12.04 php 5.4), it seems to take down my PHP as it begins to simply attempt to download the index.php file wherever I try to browse to.
Here are the attempts I've made to install curl that have taken down PHP:
sudo apt-get install php-curl
sudo apt-get install curl libcurl3 libcurl3-dev php5-curl
After each of these I restarted the apache2 server and still no dice, it attempted to download the file instead of opening the page.
How can I install php5-curl to just the cli, so that my server can run it and I don't have to go through a browser?
The other possibility is I could run the cronjobs through wget from the crontab file, but I've heard that's not the best option and potentially unreliable.
Any help is much appreciated. Thanks!
I had the same issue. But, finally I solved it by running the following command.
sudo apt-get install php7.0-curl
Restart the server after installing. This answer may not be useful for the user who asked because he asked it two months ago. But, this may be useful for the users who reading this in the future.
Here's how I've fixed this on ubuntu 14.04 when curl was working in php files run through apache, but not when called from the cli.
ssh to your server and cd to /
find / -name 'curl.so'
Run the above find command to locate where the curl binary is hanging out at. If you can't find the file, you might need to install curl and run the find command again.
apt-get install php5-curl
You'll now want to edit the php.ini being used for php files run from the cli (it's different than the one used by apache), and is likely at /etc/php5/cli/php.ini
nano /etc/php5/cli/php.ini
You can also run
php -i | grep 'php.ini'
To get the file path, just to be sure.
In your php.ini file search for [curl] by pressing ctrl + w
You'll now want to add the extension to the file and it should look something like the following, though your path to the curl.so file and such might be a little different:
[curl]
; A default value for the CURLOPT_CAINFO option. This is required to be an
; absolute path.
;curl.cainfo =
extension=/usr/lib/php5/20131226/curl.so
After doing the above, I was able to use curl in php scripts run from the cli.
first find the version of your php cli by:
php -v
for example if it was version 7 then:
sudo apt-cache search php7
this will give you the proper module names for your current version:
php7.0-curl - CURL module for PHP <---- the name of curl module.
php7.0-dev - Files for PHP7.0 module development
php7.0-gd - GD module for PHP
php7.0-gmp - GMP module for PHP
php7.0-json - JSON module for PHP
php7.0-ldap - LDAP module for PHP
php7.0-mysql - MySQL module for PHP
.
.
so on
so to add curl support, copy the name of curl module from the list above then do the following:
sudo apt-get install php7.0-curl
If you are using the command-line interface ('cli') for php5, instead of
php -q myfile.php
please use:
php5 -q myfile.php
php5-curl seems to enable the curl module for the cli php5 and not php and both (can) load different configurations and modules.
I use ubuntu 14.04 and php 5.3. After upgrading to php 5.6.29 I also has problem with php curl. My directory structure after updating to php 5.6.29:
/etc/php5 - old version (5.3)
/etc/php/5.6 - new version
The next command
sudo apt-get install php5-curl
didn't help (looks like it connects to old php version - 5.3).
I have found next article: php 5.6 for magento
It advice to use command
apt-get -y install php5.6-curl
instead of
apt-get -y install php5-curl
It works for me!
The first thing you should always check is your php.ini file. You should have a php.ini file in your web root. Curl is installed by default on most web servers; I haven't found a web server with PHP that hasn't already had curl installed. Its not always enabled, though.
Check your your php.ini file and search for php_curl.dll, it should look like this:
;extension=php_curl.dll
Just remove the semicolon (;) from before "extension" and save the file. It should work right away. According to your phpinfo.php its already installed, so it likely just needs to be enabled.
A similar question can be found here if you're interested: Call to undefined function curl_init()
In case someone reached here to find windows version of running curl.
Open php.ini and remove the ; before extension=php_curl.dll around line 656.
I am pretty much sure what Apache loads is C:\wamp\bin\apache\Apache2.2.17\bin\php.ini therefore you may find curl working from browser.
But when php is run from command line then it may show unknown function curl_init();
Run php -r "echo php_ini_loaded_file();" in the command line to see which ini file is being loaded.
Usually its found inside C:\wamp\bin\php\php5.3.5\php.ini its a different file from what Apache is using. So open it and then remove the ; before extension=php_curl.dll around line 656.
Hope it helps someone.
I've been having some trouble getting CURL working with PHP on a server I inherited.
So far I have enabled the extension in my php.ini by uncommenting the extension=php_curl.dll line, and restarting apache.
However, I now receive the following error when starting PHP:
PHP Warning: PHP Startup: Unable to load dynamic library '/opt/local/lib/php/extensions/php_curl.dll
The php_curl.dll file doesn't exist in the aforementioned directory, and I can't find anywhere legitimate to download it from(doesn't seem to be included in PHP, or Curl).
UPDATE
Following the steps provided in the answer here, I was able to compile a new php_curl.so file and install it to the extensions directory.
Cudos go to Francois Deschenes!!
To compile a curl.so (php_curl.dll) module from scratch:
Download and extract a new copy of your version of PHP.
Open a terminal window and go to the curl directory (Type cd php-5.3.3/ext/curl/).
Type phpize.
Type ./configure.
Type make.
Type sudo make install.
Uncomment extension=curl.so in your php.ini.
You should also make sure the extension is commented out before you start the processes, otherwise you may receive an error about the module already existing.
Why don't use
sudo port install php5-curl
(on php54: php54-curl)?
Download the 'port' using the following URL and install it:
http://www.macports.org/install.php
There are different versions and you can select one installation pack for your Mac Version.
After installed, open a terminal and type the following command to install directly,
$ sudo port install php5-curl
Otherwise
- Login to port terminal by just typing
$ sudo port
and type
> install php5-curl
It will get few minutes to install all the dependancies and finally you will see the following message
---> No broken files found.
Following the steps provided in the answer here, I was able to compile a new php_curl.so file and install it to the extensions directory.
Cudos go to Francois Deschenes!!
To compile a curl.so (php_curl.dll) module from scratch:
Download and extract a new copy of your version of PHP.
Open a terminal window and go to the curl directory (Type cd php-5.3.3/ext/curl/).
Type phpize.
Type ./configure.
Type make.
Type sudo make install.
Uncomment extension=curl.so in your php.ini.
You should also make sure the extension is commented out before you start the processes, otherwise you may receive an error about the module already existing.
I am trying to use the new facebook api and it requires libcurl PHP. I used
sudo apt-get install php5-curl
sudo apachectl -k restart
And it didn't work. I get the same error and the phpinfo() page says nothing about libcurl.
The source of this problem is probably that I built some of the tools from source (apache2, php), but then I got bored so installed a lot of the extensions with the package manager. But I'm not exactly how to go about diagnosing the point of failure.
The apt-get install for curl definitely worked, and can be found in
/usr/lib/php5/20060613/curl.so
I think a lot of my confusion stems from not knowing which files go where, and what purpose they have. Any help would be appreciated, and please tell me if I need to provide more information.
edit:
The specific error I get is:
Exception: Facebook needs the CURL PHP extension.
from line
if (!function_exists('curl_init')) {
throw new Exception('Facebook needs the CURL PHP extension.');
}
Ubuntu: 9.10
PHP: 5.2.13
Loaded Configuration File: /etc/php5/apache2/php.ini
In general it's a bad idea to mix and match software from your distribution's package manager with stuff you've built yourself. The package manager will not know anything about the stuff you've built yourself and so can get confused.
Not only that but who's to say the stuff from the package manager is even binary compatible with the stuff you've built yourself? If you build it all yourself then at least you know it will all be compatible.
Sounds to me like you should uninstall the extensions and build them yourself. If you can't or don't want to do that then go back and install apache and friends through your package manager but I would recommend having patience and going for the former option.
Answer of Questions
What version of Ubuntu?
What version of PHP?
How is Apache and PHP set up?
What ini files does phpinfo() say is parsed? (should be near the top)
Perhaps apt failed to properly modify your php.ini file to load the curl extension?
Check out your php.ini and see if you have line like:
extension=curl.so
or maybe:
extension=/usr/lib/php5/20060613/curl.so
To check if php-curl is installed please follow these steps:
Create a file in your web server (in Ubuntu it would be in /var/www folder), name it info.php
Open that file and type this command:
<?php phpinfo(); ?>
Save that file
Open your favorite browser and open that file (ex: http://localhost/info.php)
Now you will see the Information about your PHP installation
Search for Curl, and if you cannot find it, it mean your php doesn’t have curl installed.
To install php-curl please follow these steps:
Open your terminal and type this command:
sudo apt-get install curl libcurl3 libcurl3-dev php5-curl php5-mcrypt
After it finish open php.ini file (mine is at /etc/php5/apache2/php.ini ) and add this command: extension=curl.so
Save the file and restart apache with this command:
/etc/init.d/apache2 restart
Check the PHP information page again, you will find PHP-CURL installed
That’s it
Source: http://www.ivankristianto.com/os/ubuntu/howto-install-curl-in-php-apache/379/