![]() ![]() Just to clarifying, I'm building PHP from source, and so need to explicitly tell the configure script which PHP options and extensions I'd like. Probably /usr/lib/php/modules? Thanks for the reply Dan. I'm not sure where Ubuntu puts the extensions themselves. All the standard ones are already be installed, and you'll find their configurations in the php.d directory. I run RedHat/CentOS on all my servers, and installing a PHP extension is just one command, which doesn't involve compiling PHP. I'm sure most non-standard extensions you would want to add are available through apt-get or whatever Ubuntu's package manager is. You don't have to recompile PHP to enable or disable them, you just add them to your php.ini, the same as you did in Windows. The only difference is the file extension -.so vs.dll. Dynamic libraries work the same in Linux as they do for you in Windows. It took me almost an hour just to add a couple of common extensions to my PHP build. I guess the same question is, is there anywhere on the internetz that offers a repository of pre-compiled '.so' php modules which would be compatible with Ubuntu 9.10? Note, this isn't even mentioning the hassle of finding all the dependencies required to build extensions with PHP. There was no extension=php_soap.dll in my php.ini But this was because I had copied the php.ini from a old and. PHP: How do I install soap extension? Ask Question. Yum install php-soap Then I went to php.ini to un-comment soap extension. What is an extension and how do I install one on my site? We have VPS with CentOS I have installed soap with following command. Our Extension Library contains many small enhancements to The Events Calendar. This is an open forum to discuss the current news, features, artwork, ninja. To download OVERGROWTH SUMLAUNCHER, click on the Download button. This is a guest post from Aaron Jacobs, one of the masterminds behind the essential SUMLauncher! I’m Aaron Jacobs, the programmer for SUMLauncher. I was wondering if there was a more Windows approach to extensions on Linux, or if I'm start with re-building PHP every time I want to add or remove an extension. If you ever change you're mind you have to re-configure, re-make and re-install PHP. With PHP on Linux though, you don't get this, instead you need to compile PHP with all the extensions you wish to use, or think you may use in the future. On Windows, when you install PHP, you get a whole load of extensions under the 'ext' directory which you can enable or disable at leisure. The biggest difference I've noticed between PHP on Windows and PHP on Linux is how they handle extensions. I'm not making the jump to a Ubuntu virtual machine to host my LAMP development environment. Hi All, For the past few years, I've always ran Apache, PHP and MySQL under Windows, only ever using Linux for my production environment (which I rarely had to touch). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |