On 29 Aug 2008, at 19:46, Jochem Maas wrote:
David Otton schreef:
2008/8/28 Jochem Maas <jochem@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
I have a feeling I'm out of luck - probably security issues that
keep
you from doing such a thing as well.
I did have the idea of grabbing the PID and then grepping the
output of
ps via exec() ... that would do it, but I reckon it smells. :-)
That won't work.
in what sense won't it work? the complete line is in the output of
ps somewhere
albeit after wildcard/shell expansion.
Quote the entire command as a string. Pass it to a shell script that
sets an environment variable to that string, then executes the
string.
if life were that simple. it's user X running the php script from the
commandline ... I wanna know exactly what he is doing (which is not
necessarily the same as what he should be doing). I only really
control
the php script in question not the context it is run in.
I think the only way to do what you want is to parse the output from
ps with appropriate arguments. You'll probably need to find the parent
process of your PHP script. Don't think you're going to find a
portable way to do it.
-Stut
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http://stut.net/
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