Php server response to android when executing a batch file - php

I have an application which is in java & i have created a batch file(.bat) of that application & running it in php like this
<?php
system ("cmd.exe /c final.bat");
?>
The output is something like this
C:\wamp\www\php>java -jar Most closely reseambling is this...C:\wamp\www\php>pause Press any key to continue . . .
I am invoking this through my android application & want this out as response...Can you tell me how to do this .... It would be great if I would be able to eliminate prompts from response.

Check out the exec function. Instead of automatically printing the output, it will return the output as a string, or in an optional array of lines in the second argument. You can then parse this string or array and print only what you need.
Example which would print all but the first line of output:
exec('cmd.exe /c final.bat',$output);
for($i = 1; $i < count($output); ++$i) echo $output[$i],'<br />';

system returns any output from the command, so a simple
echo system(...);
would do the trick. To be able to send text as input to the invoked command, you should look into using popen() instead, which lets you "use" the invoked command as if you were using it from a shell/command prompt.
Note that system will block until the external program finishes. In your case, with it sitting there with "press any key to continue", this will never happen and your PHP process will just sit there indefinitely (or until max_execution_time is exceeded, whichever comes first).

Related

Open Linux terminal command in PHP

I have a server running on Linux that execute commands to 12 nodes (12 computers with Linux running in them). I recently downloaded PHP on the server to create web pages that can execute commands by opening a specific PHP file.
I used exec(), passthru(), shell_​exec(), and system(). system() is the only one that returns a part of my code. I would like PHP to act like open termainal command in linux and I cannot figure out how to do it!
Here is an example of what is happening now (Linux directly vs PHP):
When using linux open terminal command directly:
user#wizard:/home/hyperwall/Desktop> /usr/local/bin/chbg -mt
I get an output:
The following settings will be used:
option = mtsu COLOR = IMAGE = imagehereyouknow!
NODES = LOCAL
and additional code to send it to 12 nodes.
Now with PHP:
switch($_REQUEST['do'])
{ case 'test':
echo system('/usr/local/bin/chbg -mt');
break;
}
Output:
The following settings will be used:
option = mtsu COLOR = IMAGE = imagehereyouknow!
NODES = LOCAL
And stops! Anyone has an explanation of what is happening? And how to fix it? Only system displays part of the code the other functions display nothing!
My First thought is it can be something about std and output error. Some softwares dump some informations on std out and some in std error. When you are not redirecting std error to std out, most of the system calls only returns the stdout part. It sounds thats why you see the whole output in terminal and can't in the system calls.
So try with
/usr/local/bin/chbg -mt 2>&1
Edit:
Also for a temporary work through, you can try some other things. For example redirect the output to file next to the script and read its contents after executing the command, This way you can use the exec:
exec("usr/local/bin/chbg -mt 2>&1 > chbg_out");
//Then start reading chbg_out and see is it work
Edit2
Also it does not make sense why others not working for you.
For example this piece of code written in c, dumps a string in stderr and there is other in stdout.
#include <stdio.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
int main()
{
fputs("\nerr\nrro\nrrr\n",stderr);
fputs("\nou\nuu\nuttt\n",stdout);
return 0;
}
and this php script, tries to run that via exec:
<?php
exec("/tmp/ctest",&$result);
foreach ( $result as $v )
{
echo $v;
}
#output ouuuuttt
?>
See it still dumps out the stdout. But it did not receive the stderr.
Now consider this:
<?php
exec("/tmp/ctest 2>&1",&$result);
foreach ( $result as $v )
{
echo $v;
}
//output: errrrorrrouuuuttt
?>
See, this time we got the whole outputs.
This time the system:
<?php
echo system("/tmp/ctest 2>&1");
//output: err rro rrr ou uu uttt uttt
?>
and so on ...
Maybe your chbg -mt writes additional code to stderr instead of stdout? Try to execute your script inside php like this:
/usr/local/bin/chbg -mt 2>&1
The other responses are good for generic advice. But in this specific case, it appears you are trying to change your background on your desktop. This requires many special considerations because of 'user context':
First, your web server is probably running as a different user, and therefore would not have permissions to change your desktop.
Second, the program probably requires some environmental variables from your user context. For example, X programs need a DISPLAY variable, ssh-agent needs SSH_AGENT_PID and SSH_AUTH_SOCK, etc. I don't know much about changing backgrounds, but I'm guessing it involves D-Bus, which probably requires things like DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS, KONSOLE_DBUS_SERVICE, KONSOLE_DBUS_SESSION, and KONSOLE_DBUS_WINDOW. There may be many others. Note that some of these vars change every time you log in, so you can't hard-code them on the PHP side.
For testing, it might be simpler to start your own webserver right from your user session. (i.e. Don't use the system one, it has to run as you. You will need to run it on an alternate port, like 8080). The web server you start manually will have all the 'context' it needs. I'll mention websocketd because it just came out and looks neat.
For "production", you may need to run a daemon in your user context all the time, and have the web server talk to that daemon to 'get stuff done' inside your user context.
PHP's system only returns the last line of execution:
Return Value: Returns the last line of the command output on success, and FALSE on failure.
You will most likely want to use either exec or passthru. exec has an optional parameter to put the output into an array. You could implode the output and use that to echo it.
switch($_REQUEST['do'])
{ case 'test':
exec('/usr/local/bin/chbg -mt', $output);
echo implode('\n', $output); // Could use <br /> if HTML output is desired
break;
}
I think that the result of execution, can changes between users.
First, try to run your PHP script directly into your terminal php yourScript.php
If it runs as expected, go to your Apache service and update it to run with your own credentials
You are trying to change the backgrounds for currently logged in users... While they are using the desktop. Like while I'm typing this message. I minimize my browser and 'ooh my desktop background is different'. Hopefully this is for something important like it turns red when the reactor or overheating.
Anyway to my answer:
Instead of trying to remotely connect and run items as the individual users. Setup each user to run a bash script (in their own account, in their own shell) on a repeating timer. Say every 10 minutes. Have it select the SAME file.. from a network location
/somenetworkshare/backgrounds/images/current.png
Then you can update ALL nodes (1 to a million) just by changing the image itself in /somenetworkshare/backgrounds/images/current.png
I wrote something a while ago that does just this -- you can run a command interpreter (/bin/sh), send it commands, read back responses, send more commands, etc. It uses proc_open() to open a child process and talk to it.
It's at http://github.com/andrasq/quicklib, Quick/Proc/Process.php
Using it would look something like (easier if you have a flexible autoloader; I wrote one of those too in Quicklib):
include 'lib/Quick/Proc/Exception.php';
include 'lib/Quick/Proc/Exists.php';
include 'lib/Quick/Proc/Process.php';
$proc = new Quick_Proc_Process("/bin/sh");
$proc->putInput("pwd\n");
$lines = $proc->getOutputLines($nlines = 10, $timeoutSec = 0.2);
echo $lines[0];
$proc->putInput("date\n");
$lines = $proc->getOutputLines(1, 0.2);
echo $lines[0];
Outputs
/home/andras/quicklib
Sat Feb 21 01:50:39 EST 2015
The unit of communication between php and the process is newline terminated lines. All commands must be newline terminated, and all responses are retrieved in units of lines. Don't forget the newlines, they're hard to identify afterward.
I am working on a project that uses Terminal A on machine A to output to Terminal B on Machine B, both using linux for now. I didnt see it mentioned, but perhaps you can use redirection, something like this in your webserver:
switch($_REQUEST['do'])
{ case 'test':
#process ID on the target (12345, 12346 etc)
echo system('/usr/local/bin/chbg -mt > /proc/<processID>/fd/1');
#OR
#device file on the target (pts/0,tty0, etc)
echo system('/usr/local/bin/chbg -mt > /dev/<TTY-TYPE>/<TTYNUM>');
break;
}
Definitely the permissions need to be set correctly for this to work. The command "mesg y" in a terminal may also assist...Hope that helps.

Running script and executing PHP for output

I'm looking to run a program, and for every output line it generates, execute a PHP script and pass the line content to it.
I know, pretty hard to understand. Here's an example:
Execute script -> script outputs 'Initializing script on 127.0.0.1'. Now it needs to execute a command like php5 input.php 'Initializing script on 127.0.0.1'.
Is this doable? If so, how would I go about doing this?
Edit: to clarify; I basically want command > log.txt but in stead of writing the output to that file, writing it to a PHP script as an argument
PHP is an interpreter much like Bash, Python, etc, so you can do "normal" scripting with it. For example:
#!/usr/bin/php5
<?php
echo "Hello, world!\n";
while($line = fgets(STDIN)) {
echo "> " . $line;
}
?>
Mark the file as executable, then run:
$ /program/that/generates/lines | /path/to/your/php/script
However, contrary to your original question, it sounds to me like you actually want to use JavaScript and possibly AJAX for web purposes. Sane web applications will have the said script run in the background and safely write the results to a file or stream, using AJAX to read it and update the information on the current page.

PHP exec - echo output line by line during progress

I'm trying to find a way in which I can echo out the output of an exec call, and then flush that to the screen while the process is running. I have written a simple PHP script which accepts a file upload and then converts the file if it is not the appropriate file type using FFMPEG. I am doing this on a windows machine. Currently my command looks like so:
$cmd = "ffmpeg.exe -i ..\..\uploads\\".$filename." ..\..\uploads\\".$filename.".m4v 2>&1";
exec( $cmd, $output);
I need something like this:
while( $output ) {
print_r( $output);
ob_flush(); flush();
}
I've read about using ob_flush() and flush() to clear the output buffer, but I only get output once the process has completed. The command works perfectly, It just doesn't update the Page while converting. I'd like to have some output so the person knows what's going on.
I've set the time out
set_time_limit( 10 * 60 ); //5 minute time out
and would be very greatful if someone could put me in the right direction. I've looked at a number of solutions which come close one Stackoverflow, but none seem to have worked.
Since the exec call is a blocking call you have no way of using buffers to get status.
Instead you could redirect the output in the system call to a log file. Let the client query the server for progress update in which case the server could parse the last lines of the log file to get information about current progress and send it back to the client.
exec() is blocking call, and will NOT return control to PHP until the external program has terminated. That means you cannot do anything to dump the output on a line-by-line basis because PHP is suspended while the external app is running.
For what you want, you need to use proc_open, which returns a filehandle you can read from in a loop. e.g.
$fh = proc_open('.....');
while($line = fgets($fh)) {
print($line);
flush();
}
There are two problems with this approach:
The first is that, as #Marc B notes, the fact that exec will block until it's finished. You'll have to devise some way of measuring progress.
The second is that using ob_flush() in this way amounts to holding the connection between server & client open and dribbling the data out a little at a time. This is not something that the HTTP protocol was designed for and while it might work sometimes, it's not going to work consistently - different browsers and different servers will time out differently. The better way to do it is via AJAX calls: using Javascript's setTimeout() function (or setInterval()), make a call to the server periodically and have the server send back a progress report.

issuing things to shell and forgetting about it in php

how do you issue commands to the shell and then forget it's output and such? for example:
<?php
echo `sleep 2;echo hi`;
echo "foo";
?>
the result for this is hifoo. i would want a result that gives me foohi. why? i want the command issued to the shell simply issued and forgotten, i am confused about why PHP will wait for the result. is such a result possible?
(the idea behind this is setting up the correct number of selenium grid RC instances programatically. currently, it will stop after the first process is opened)
From php.net exec()
If a program is started with this
function, in order for it to continue
running in the background, the output
of the program must be redirected to a
file or another output stream. Failing
to do so will cause PHP to hang until
the execution of the program ends.
The same applies for all shell commands.
It's like anything you do at the command prompt, unless you take measures to put the new command in the background, the shell (and PHP ) will block until the command exits. Try this:
<?php
echo `(sleep 2; echo hi) &`;
echo 'foo';
?>
Note the brackets around your command, without that, the & woulud apply only to the echo , and you'd still have the 2 second pause.

How to run a .cmd file from within PHP and display the results

I need to run a .cmd batch file from within a php script.
The PHP will be accessed via an authenticated session within a browser.
When I run the .cmd file from the desktop of the server, it spits out some output to cmd.exe.
I'd like to route this output back to the php page.
Is this doable?
Yes it is doable. You can use
exec("mycommand.cmd", &$outputArray);
and print the content of the array:
echo implode("\n", $outputArray);
look here for more info
$result = `whatever.cmd`;
print $result; // Prints the result of running "whatever.cmd"
I prefer to use popen for this kind of task. Especially for long-running commands, because you can fetch output line-by-line and send it to browser, so there is less chance of timeout. Here's an example:
$p = popen('script.cmd', 'r');
if ($p)
{
while (!feof($p))
echo gets($p); // get output line-by-line
pclose($p);
}
You can use shell_exec, or the backticks operator, to launch a command and get the output as a string.
If you want to pass parameters to that command, you should envisage using escapeshellargs to escape them before calling the command ; and you might take a look at escapeshellcmd too ^^
Use the php popen() function

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