16

I am trying to create a webserver that serves PHP scripts. Currently, it works as follows:

  1. The client requests /index.php?test=value
  2. The server invokes php index.php
  3. The server feeds the HTTP request headers as STDIN to the PHP process
  4. The server reads the output of php from STDOUT and returns it to the client

All of this is working except that the parameters are not being passed to the PHP script because:

var_dump($_GET);

returns:

array(0) { }

How do $_GET parameters get passed to the PHP binary when it is invoked?

HopelessN00b
  • 54,273
Nathan Osman
  • 2,755

4 Answers4

32

Which PHP binary are you using? The CLI or CGI? I suspect you need a CGI version of the binary for PHP to properly handle accept the environment variables and POST data if you pass that.

The php-cgi binary implements the CGI interface, which allows you to pass parameters on the command line:

php-cgi -f index.php left=1058 right=1067 class=A language=English

Which end up in $_GET:

Array
(
    [left] => 1058
    [right] => 1067
    [class] => A
    [language] => English
)

You may want to read up on how CGI works so you can implement that in your web server.

Ref: RFC3875

Zoredache
  • 133,737
3

According to Wikipedia, the answer is to set the QUERY_STRING environment variable:

QUERY_STRING='user=foo&pass=bar&left=1234' php-cgi index.php

or in separate steps:

export QUERY_STRING='user=foo&pass=bar&left=1234'
php-cgi index.php

This works if you use the php-cgi command, because this is part of the CGI specification. The ordinary php command ignores this variable, but your script might use it.

qris
  • 1,255
Nathan Osman
  • 2,755
1

If you pass php script.php test=asdf

$result = parse_args($argv,$argc,$help);
print_r($result);

If you are passing it to STDIN, you would need to read STDIN and parse the headers yourself. REQUEST_URI would contain the data you need, and you could pass that.

karmawhore
  • 3,925
-1

A complete, yet simple solution to have parameters through $_GET, whether requested from CLI of any web servers or from URL:

if (empty($_GET)) {
  if (isset($argv))
    parse_str(implode('&', $argv), $_GET);
  elseif (isset($_SERVER['argv']))
    parse_str(implode('&', $_SERVER['argv']), $_GET);
}

Therefore both below requests give us foo GET parameter:

http://example.com/test.php?foo=bar

/bin/env php /.../test.php foo=bar