I’m currently developing a couple of plugins for Sublime Text 2 on OS X and I would like to make them cross platform, meaning I have to find out if and where php.exe
is installed.
Right now I call /usr/bin/php
in Python, which obviously works only on OS X and Linux:
phppath = '/usr/bin/php'<br> pluginpath = sublime.packages_path() + '/HtmlTidy/tidy.php'<br> retval = os.system( '%s "%s"' % ( phppath, scriptpath ) )
But on Windows, there seems to be no definitive default path for php.exe. The more I googled for it, the more possibilities showed up. So far I think I would have to check each of the following paths for existence:
c:phpphp.exe c:php5php.exe c:windowsphp.exe c:program filesphpphp.exe c:wampbinphpphp5php.exe c:xamppphpphp.exe
That’s already quite a collection, but what I’m asking for is either a complete list covering all possibilities – or another way to figure it out that should be as robust as checking each possible path.
So if you have php.exe installed in some place other than these, please leave a comment with your path and I will add it to the list above.
Besides, there seems to be php.exe
and php-cli.exe
. I guess it would be OK to loop through each possible path. Check first for php-cli.exe, check for php.exe, and take the first match. Is that correct or is there a better practice?
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Answer
If the user has added PHP’s bin folder to the system PATH
, then you should just be able to try and execute php -v
to check that it’s present.
If you want to obtain the full path to the PHP executable and the target system is Windows Server 2003 or later (so Windows Vista, and Windows 7) then you could use the WHERE
command, i.e.:
C:> where php.exe C:Program Files (x86)WAMPbinphpphp5.3.5php.exe
Also see possibly related question: Is there an equivalent of ‘which’ on the Windows command line?.
If you are really desperate to find any file on the user’s computer, you could try executing the equivalent of a find
– but it’s going to be slooow!
C: && cd && dir /s /b php.exe