PHP 7.0.6 Released

Input/output streams

The CLI SAPI defines a few constants for I/O streams to make programming for the command line a bit easier.

CLI specific Constants
Constant Description
STDIN

An already opened stream to stdin. This saves opening it with

<?php
$stdin 
fopen('php://stdin''r');
?>
If you want to read single line from stdin, you can use
<?php
$line 
trim(fgets(STDIN)); // reads one line from STDIN
fscanf(STDIN"%d\n"$number); // reads number from STDIN
?>

STDOUT

An already opened stream to stdout. This saves opening it with

<?php
$stdout 
fopen('php://stdout''w');
?>

STDERR

An already opened stream to stderr. This saves opening it with

<?php
$stderr 
fopen('php://stderr''w');
?>

Given the above, you don't need to open e.g. a stream for stderr yourself but simply use the constant instead of the stream resource:

php -r 'fwrite(STDERR, "stderr\n");'
You do not need to explicitly close these streams, as they are closed automatically by PHP when your script ends.

Note:

These constants are not available if reading the PHP script from stdin.

User Contributed Notes

Aurelien Marchand
5 years ago
Please remember in multi-process applications (which are best suited under CLI), that I/O operations often will BLOCK signals from being processed.

For instance, if you have a parent waiting on fread(STDIN), it won't handle SIGCHLD, even if you defined a signal handler for it, until after the call to fread has returned.

Your solution in this case is to wait on stream_select() to find out whether reading will block. Waiting on stream_select(), critically, does NOT BLOCK signals from being processed.

Aurelien
ecrist at secure-computing dot net
4 years ago
The following code shows how to test for input on STDIN.  In this case, we were looking for CSV data, so we use fgetcsv to read STDIN, if it creates an array, we assume CVS input on STDIN, if no array was created, we assume there's no input from STDIN, and look, later, to an argument with a CSV file name.

Note, without the stream_set_blocking() call, fgetcsv() hangs on STDIN, awaiting input from the user, which isn't useful as we're looking for a piped file. If it isn't here already, it isn't going to be.

<?php
stream_set_blocking
(STDIN, 0);
$csv_ar = fgetcsv(STDIN);
if (
is_array($csv_ar)){
  print
"CVS on STDIN\n";
} else {
  print
"Look to ARGV for CSV file name.\n";
}
?>
James Zhu
5 years ago
Example:

<?php
function ReadStdin($prompt, $valid_inputs, $default = '') {
    while(!isset(
$input) || (is_array($valid_inputs) && !in_array($input, $valid_inputs)) || ($valid_inputs == 'is_file' && !is_file($input))) {
        echo
$prompt;
       
$input = strtolower(trim(fgets(STDIN)));
        if(empty(
$input) && !empty($default)) {
           
$input = $default;
        }
    }
    return
$input;
}

// you can input <Enter> or 1, 2, 3
$choice = ReadStdin('Please choose your answer or press Enter to continue: ', array('', '1', '2', '3'));

// check input is valid file name, use /var/path for input nothing
$file = ReadStdin('Please input the file name(/var/path):', 'is_file', '/var/path');
?>

you can add more functions if you want.
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