Re: Re[2]: Redirect output to a file on the web server

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Mon, 2010-12-06 at 20:31 +0200, Andre Polykanine wrote:
> Hello Steve,
> 
> Btw, the built-in mail() function is tooooo slow to send such amount
> of mail. Consider using SMTP (if you don't).
> -- 
> With best regards from Ukraine,
> Andre
> Skype: Francophile
> Twitter: http://twitter.com/m_elensule
> Facebook: http://facebook.com/menelion
> 
> ----- Original message -----
> From: Steve Staples <sstaples@xxxxxxxx>
> To: php-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <php-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Date: Monday, December 6, 2010, 6:41:34 PM
> Subject:  Redirect output to a file on the web server
> 
> On Mon, 2010-12-06 at 16:19 +0000, Richard Quadling wrote:
> > On 6 December 2010 15:46, Ferdi <ferdinand.s@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > > On 6 December 2010 20:47, Steve Staples <sstaples@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > >> On Mon, 2010-12-06 at 20:29 +0530, Ferdi wrote:
> > >> > Greetings List members,
> > >> >
> > >> > I have a script that takes quite a while to run, one or two hours, I wish
> > >> to
> > >> > redirect the normal php output to a file on the webserver itself. I don't
> > >> > mind if in the process, the browser displays a blank page. The reason I
> > >> want
> > >> > to do this is that if the script crashes or the browser Is closed by
> > >> > mistake, I have absolutely no record of where the script stopped running.
> > >> >
> > >> > I could use code like below
> > >> > At the beginning of the script:
> > >> > ob_start();
> > >> >
> > >> > At the end of the script:
> > >> > $page = ob_get_contents();
> > >> > ob_end_flush();
> > >> > $fp = fopen("output.html","w");
> > >> > fwrite($fp,$page);
> > >> > fclose($fp);
> > >> >
> > >> > However, I see some problems with this:
> > >> > I'm not too sure of the size of the output. It may balloon to over the
> > >> > buffering limit (in PHP? Apache?) and then what happens?
> > >> > Secondly, if the script crashes before the end, I won't get any output.
> > >> > Finally, I am using a library in the script that outputs status and error
> > >> > messages of its own. So, if I manually opened a file and used fwrite()
> > >> > alongside echo for my messages, I would lose out on those messages.
> > >> >
> > >> > Anybody has any pointers on how you could send the output not only to a
> > >> > browser, but also to a file on the webserver? If not, at least to a file?
> > >> >
> > >> > Thanks and regards,
> > >> > Ferdi
> > >>
> > >> Just curious, but if it takes that long to run, why are you running it
> > >> from a browser?  why not run it from the commandline, that way you dont
> > >> have to change your php.ini for the webserver (increasing the timeout,
> > >> memory limits, etc etc... you can change those for the CLI only?
> > >>
> > >> 2 hours is a long time to "hope" that the browser doesn't close, or
> > >> connectivity doesn't get interupted for even 1 microsecond...
> > >>
> > >> if the script has "breaks" in it, where it starts to do something else,
> > >> you can put in an email to yourself, to say "hey, we're HERE now"
> > >>
> > >> but i would look into running it from the CLI over the webserver, you
> > >> would be less likely to run into issues on something that takes that
> > >> amount of time to run.
> > >>
> > >> If you needed the output to be displayed on a webpage, you can write the
> > >> progress to a file, and then have a php webpage that reads the file, and
> > >> using ajax or whatever, refresh the content.
> > >>
> > >> good luck in your script, and if you still run it from the browser, and
> > >> need to output to a file, then i would continually be writing content to
> > >> that file, every time you do soemthing, or start another part of the
> > >> script so you know EXACTLY where you are, at all times...
> > >>
> > >> Steve
> > >>
> > >
> > > Hi Steve,
> > >
> > > Thanks for the tips. To answer your queries, I don't mind using CLI. How do
> > > I then ensure the messages, error or otherwise, output by the library I use,
> > > show up in the file I'm outputting to? Please note that I only make calls to
> > > the functions and object methods from this library and error or success
> > > messages are probably echo'd by the code from the library.
> > >
> > > I believe some context is in order. I am actually sending an email to a
> > > large number of our customers (around 10,000), each with the customer's
> > > name.
> > >
> > > My script does output a simple success or failure message. The library
> > > outputs more technical info. All I would like to know is which email got
> > > sent and which one failed. As you point out, I could write the success /
> > > failure messages to a file, but, I would also like to capture the messages
> > > output by the library.
> > >
> > > Thanks and regards,
> > > Ferdi
> > >
> > 
> > I would log the success/failure with the data (assuming it is coming from a DB).
> > 
> > If not, you could use a simple file_put_contents($filename, date('r')
> > . $text . PHP_EOL, FILE_APPEND);
> > 
> > That would append 1 line of text at a time to the file. Using tail on
> > that file would show you the last work done (and when it was done).
> > 
> > 
> > -- 
> > Richard Quadling
> > Twitter : EE : Zend
> > @RQuadling : e-e.com/M_248814.html : bit.ly/9O8vFY
> > 
> 
> if you're using a linux based server, you could log (like Richard said)
> each success / failure to the file, or each to its own success / failure
> file, and then if you want to watch the, you could just do a tail -f of
> the file, to see what is it doing (sometimes having it scroll is pretty
> handy i find)... 
> 
> it wouldn't be hard to write a web-based 'tail -f' page, so you can
> track the progress from anywhere you wanted :)

Andre, 

I use pear mailer, or phpmailer to do all my mailing, which is done
through smtp...  i've never used the built-in mail() function, just
because i prefer not too :)

Steve


-- 
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php



[Index of Archives]     [PHP Home]     [Apache Users]     [PHP on Windows]     [Kernel Newbies]     [PHP Install]     [PHP Classes]     [Pear]     [Postgresql]     [Postgresql PHP]     [PHP on Windows]     [PHP Database Programming]     [PHP SOAP]

  Powered by Linux