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Lista das seções do php.ini

Esta lista inclui as seções do php.ini que você pode modificar para configurar sua instalação do PHP baseado em host ou em pastas. Estas seções são opcionais.

Estas seções não afetam diretamente o PHP. Elas são usadas para agrupar outras diretivas php.ini e agir de acordo um host específico ou uma pasta específica.

Estas seções são usadas somente no modo CGI/FastCGI e não podem modificar as diretivas extension e zend_extension.

Seções
Nome Modificável Registro de Alterações
[HOST=] INI_SYSTEM  
[PATH=] INI_SYSTEM  

Aqui está uma breve explicação das diretivas de configuração.

[HOST=<host>]

Esta seção permite definir um conjunto de diretivas do php.ini que terá efeito no host definido.

Exemplo #1 Ativa a exibição completa de erros na tela para o domínio dev.

[HOST=dev.site.com]
error_reporting = E_ALL
display_errors = On

[PATH=<path>]

Esta seção permite definir um conjunto de diretivas do php.ini que terá efeito quando um script for executado a partir da pasta definida.

Exemplo #2 Adiciona o script security.php para áreas protegidas

[PATH=/home/site/public/secure]
auto_prepend_file=security.php

adicione uma nota

Notas Enviadas por Usuários (em inglês) 8 notes

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7
public at grik dot net
15 years ago
In [HOST=...] one should use only the 1st server name from the list of server names.

I.E. if you have
server_name example.com, example2.com;
and will use www.example.com in a browser,
use [HOST=example.com] in php.ini for both addresses.

PHP looks not at the HOST request header (as I expected), but at the SERVER_NAME parameter (which by default is the 1st from the list of names, no matter what the HOST is).
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2
robinhook at mail dot com
6 years ago
this HOST and PATH sections doesn't seems to work in php.ini under apache 2.4 with php-fpm 7.1.16 for directive php_value or php_admin_value open_basedir or include_path.
phpinfo() says "none" in master and local values.
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1
robinhook at mail dot com
6 years ago
Sorry for the note. I've read some bad tutorials.
The correct syntax is : directive = 'value'
not a thing like : php_value[directive] = "somevalue"
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1
crash at lubyte dot de
14 years ago
If you have a system which uses separated PHP inis for loading extensions (Debian, Fedora and most other distributions do so), [PATH=] or [HOST=] will prevent loading extensions defined in those ini files (extension= and zend_extension=).

I had some headache, when I added a hosts.ini to /etc/php5/cgi/conf.d (Debians default), where I wanted to define some defaults for a host name. The manual says extension= and zend_extension= aren't allowed in [HOST=] and [PATH=] (see above). I figured out that you can easily fix that with adding [PHP] after your definitions.

For example hosts.ini:
[HOST=dev.example.com]
display_errors = on

[PHP]

this will change the section back to [PHP] where extension= and zend_extension= is allowed.
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1
leo
13 years ago
Just developed the probably first php.ini hack to add commands which will only be parsed before PHP 5.3 when using mod_php.

<?php

# Disable eAccelerator by default
eaccelerator.enable = 0

# Now, to prevent incompatibilities with Zend Optimizer+, we
# want to enable eAccelerator only in PHP 5.2 or lower.
[HOST=*]
eaccelerator.enable = 1

?>

What is happening here? In PHP 5.3, php.ini sections to set up PHP on a per host basis have been introduced:

http://www.php.net/manual/en/ini.sections.php

These sections only work in CGI/FastCGI mode, however there still seems to be a difference in how the php.ini file is parsed in PHP 5.2 and PHP 5.3 when using mod_php: PHP 5.3 ignores everything below the line [HOST=*], whereas PHP 5.2 does not.

In the above example, PHP 5.3 only reads "eaccelerator.enable = 0" and then stops at the invalid command [HOST=*]. However, PHP 5.2 seems to ignore the invalid command and parses the whole configuration file, ending up with "eaccelerator.enable = 1".
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0
dasloch at absatzen dot de
4 years ago
Note that you cannot usefully set syslog.* in [PATH=] (and probably [HOST=]) sections, since the syslogger is initialized only once per php-fpm worker process, and not per request.
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-1
z dot himdi at bita dot nl
13 years ago
On Windows IIS 7 server I noticed that [PATH=] was not listened to. [HOST=] however worked.
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-1
robert dot johnson at icap dot com
14 years ago
Adding PATH= applies only to the named path and does not include sub-directories, you have to add a PATH= value for each sub-directory.

Also some settings have no effect even though phpinfo recognises and displays the per-folder value as the 'local' value, and the default as the 'master' value.

'fastcgi.impersonate' always uses the master setting.
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