Is it me or does -d no longer work in 4.3? To test:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
(assuming you have it off in your php.ini)
Works fine for me in 4.3.2 but looks quite broken in 4.3.4. Anybody play
around in that code?
-Rasmus
Is it me or does -d no longer work in 4.3? To test:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
(assuming you have it off in your php.ini)
Works fine for me in 4.3.2 but looks quite broken in 4.3.4. Anybody play
around in that code?-Rasmus
Works fine for me in 4.3.4RC3. Here is the output:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
track_errors => Off => Off
Cheers,
Joe (a.k.a. guru)
Hello Joe,
Wednesday, February 4, 2004, 10:40:10 PM, you wrote:
Is it me or does -d no longer work in 4.3? To test:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
(assuming you have it off in your php.ini)
Works fine for me in 4.3.2 but looks quite broken in 4.3.4. Anybody play
around in that code?-Rasmus
Works fine for me in 4.3.4RC3. Here is the output:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
track_errors => Off => Off
No. Since you set track_errors to 1 (=On) it shouldn't display Off.
--
Best regards,
Marcus mailto:helly@php.net
Is it me or does -d no longer work in 4.3? To test:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
(assuming you have it off in your php.ini)
Works fine for me in 4.3.2 but looks quite broken in 4.3.4. Anybody play
around in that code?-Rasmus
Works fine for me in 4.3.4RC3. Here is the output:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
track_errors => Off => Off
Well that shows exactly that it didn't work. track_errors should be
saying On there since you set it to 1 with the -d. It turns out
that between PHP 4.3.2 and 4.3.4 php -i was changed to ignore any -d
settings.
-Rasmus
Is it me or does -d no longer work in 4.3? To test:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
(assuming you have it off in your php.ini)
Works fine for me in 4.3.2 but looks quite broken in 4.3.4. Anybody play
around in that code?-Rasmus
Works fine for me in 4.3.4RC3. Here is the output:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
track_errors => Off => OffWell that shows exactly that it didn't work. track_errors should be
saying On there since you set it to 1 with the -d. It turns out
that between PHP 4.3.2 and 4.3.4 php -i was changed to ignore any -d
settings.-Rasmus
My appologies. For some reason I was thinking 1 was Off and 0 On. It's
been a very long day :|
Is it me or does -d no longer work in 4.3? To test:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
(assuming you have it off in your php.ini)
Works fine for me in 4.3.2 but looks quite broken in 4.3.4. Anybody play
around in that code?-Rasmus
Works fine for me in 4.3.4RC3. Here is the output:
php -d "track_errors=1" -i | grep track
track_errors => Off => OffWell that shows exactly that it didn't work. track_errors should be
saying On there since you set it to 1 with the -d. It turns out
that between PHP 4.3.2 and 4.3.4 php -i was changed to ignore any -d
settings.
it works for me with php-4.3.4 cgi-sapi: track_errors is reported to
be set correctly. but it doesn't work with cli-sapi (i only had 4.3.3
as cli to test that).
it seems the problem is specific to the cli-sapi.
-Rasmus