I’ve got a PHP script that needs to invoke a shell script but doesn’t care at all about the output. The shell script makes a number of SOAP calls and is slow to complete, so I don’t want to slow down the PHP request while it waits for a reply. In fact, the PHP request should be able to exit without terminating the shell process.
I’ve looked into the various exec(), shell_exec(), pcntl_fork(), etc. functions, but none of them seem to offer exactly what I want. (Or, if they do, it’s not clear to me how.) Any suggestions?
If it ‘doesn’t care about the output’, couldn’t the exec to the script be called with the
&to background the process?EDIT – incorporating what @AdamTheHut commented to this post, you can add this to a call to
exec:That will redirect both
stdio(first>) andstderr(2>) to/dev/nulland run in the background.There are other ways to do the same thing, but this is the simplest to read.
An alternative to the above double-redirect: