I\'m using PhantomJS on windows and accessing the files through command line. Now I want to install it on the server I\'m working on local host so I want it
//throws a lot of errors because searching some libraries
$cmd = 'unset DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH ;';
$cmd.= ' /abs/path/to/phantomjs';
$cmd.= ' /abs/path/to/script.js';
//set environment variable to node source
putenv('PATH=/abs/path/to/node/bin/');
//now exec the cmd and pipe the errors to stdout
exec($cmd.' 2>&1', $output);
//and output the results
print_r($output);
here is the answer from the above url you suggested. I've changed it accordingly to mine paths
<?php
$cmd = ' ./ScreenShotWeb/phantomjs';
$cmd.= ' ./ScreenShotWeb/shot.js';
putenv('PATH=./ScreenShotWeb/');
exec($cmd.' 2>&1', $output);
print_r($output);
?>
I'm trying to run this but it gives the following out put
Array ( [0] => '.' is not recognized as an internal or external command, [1] => operable program or batch file. )
in my root folder (C:/xampp/htdocs) there is a folder ScreenShotWeb where I've placed EXE of PhantomJS + all the files.
The "installation" of PhantomJS is just adding its path to the PATH environment variable.
Since you're using php, you would invoke PhantomJS from your php script like it is shown here where you need to provide the full path to the PhantomJS executable. You can also use putenv
to extend the PATH directly from php as seen here.
You can return something from the PhantomJS script in the $output
variable of exec
and then parse it.
PhantomJS provides the web server module. You can write a script that listens for requests, creates the page
on request and returns the image. You would somehow run the script at startup or together with apache. It's also possible to write a wrapper so that you can run it as windows service. It may be possible to pass the requests through Apache so that the PhantomJS is not completely open to the outside.
Although this option is a little treacherous, because PhantomJS may fail and then you would need some kind of reviving mechanism. Your script may also run into a memory leak.
Both of the above options are agnostic to how you return the image. There are several possiblities.