error_log
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7)
error_log — Send an error message to the defined error handling routines
Description
bool error_log
( string $message
[, int $message_type
= 0
[, string $destination
[, string $extra_headers
]]] )
Parameters
-
message
-
The error message that should be logged.
-
message_type
-
Says where the error should go. The possible message types are as
follows:
error_log() log types
0 |
message is sent to PHP's system logger, using
the Operating System's system logging mechanism or a file, depending
on what the error_log
configuration directive is set to. This is the default option.
|
1 |
message is sent by email to the address in
the destination parameter. This is the only
message type where the fourth parameter,
extra_headers is used.
|
2 |
No longer an option.
|
3 |
message is appended to the file
destination . A newline is not automatically
added to the end of the message string.
|
4 |
message is sent directly to the SAPI logging
handler.
|
-
destination
-
The destination. Its meaning depends on the
message_type
parameter as described above.
-
extra_headers
-
The extra headers. It's used when the message_type
parameter is set to 1.
This message type uses the same internal function as
mail() does.
Return Values
Returns TRUE
on success or FALSE
on failure.
Notes
Warning
error_log() is not binary safe. message
will be truncated by null character.
Tip
message
should not contain null character. Note that message
may be sent to file, mail, syslog, etc. Use appropriate conversion/escape function, base64_encode(), rawurlencode() or addslashes() before calling error_log().
Examples
Example #1 error_log() examples
<?php
// Send notification through the server log if we can not
// connect to the database.
if (!Ora_Logon($username, $password)) {
error_log("Oracle database not available!", 0);
}
// Notify administrator by email if we run out of FOO
if (!($foo = allocate_new_foo())) {
error_log("Big trouble, we're all out of FOOs!", 1,
"[email protected]");
}
// another way to call error_log():
error_log("You messed up!", 3, "/var/tmp/my-errors.log");
?>