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Home/ Questions/Q 386213
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T15:33:17+00:00 2026-05-12T15:33:17+00:00

I have a php file that needs to be run on a cronjob and

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I have a php file that needs to be run on a cronjob and the top of it has the following

#!/usr/bin/php -q

i know the first part tells the server to interpret the file with php cause its not being run through the webserver, but what is the -q for?

Also, are there other parameters? If so, where can i read more about them.

Thanks

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T15:33:18+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 3:33 pm

    -q refers to quiet mode where header information isn’t displayed. This is now on by default but -q is still supported for backward compatability.

    Usage: php [options] [-f] <file> [--] [args...]
           php [options] -r <code> [--] [args...]
           php [options] [-B <begin_code>] -R <code> [-E <end_code>] [--] [args...]
           php [options] [-B <begin_code>] -F <file> [-E <end_code>] [--] [args...]
           php [options] -- [args...]
           php [options] -a
    
      -a               Run as interactive shell
      -c <path>|<file> Look for php.ini file in this directory
      -n               No php.ini file will be used
      -d foo[=bar]     Define INI entry foo with value 'bar'
      -e               Generate extended information for debugger/profiler
      -f <file>        Parse and execute <file>.
      -h               This help
      -i               PHP information
      -l               Syntax check only (lint)
      -m               Show compiled in modules
      -r <code>        Run PHP <code> without using script tags <?..?>
      -B <begin_code>  Run PHP <begin_code> before processing input lines
      -R <code>        Run PHP <code> for every input line
      -F <file>        Parse and execute <file> for every input line
      -E <end_code>    Run PHP <end_code> after processing all input lines
      -H               Hide any passed arguments from external tools.
      -s               Display colour syntax highlighted source.
      -v               Version number
      -w               Display source with stripped comments and whitespace.
      -z <file>        Load Zend extension <file>.
    
      args...          Arguments passed to script. Use -- args when first argument
                       starts with - or script is read from stdin
    
      --ini            Show configuration file names
    
      --rf <name>      Show information about function <name>.
      --rc <name>      Show information about class <name>.
      --re <name>      Show information about extension <name>.
      --ri <name>      Show configuration for extension <name>.
    

    php -l is the one I use the most. It’s nice, when editing, to be able to run a quick syntax check on a file (in vim, :! php -l %)

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