PECL command produces long list of errors

Solution 1:

I came across this error after updating my PHP installation to 5.5.14, on RedHat EL v6. I had installed PHP via the Yum package manager, and then needed to re-install some of the PHP extensions I was using. In searching for tips on how to solve this issue, I came across this question, and now that I have discovered a working solution I wanted to share my findings here. Other suggestions I had found online which included erasing and re-installing PECL/PEAR and even my PHP installation did not solve this issue. Finally after some further research and reviewing the source code for PECL/PEAR I found the real cause. Hopefully what follows will be of help to others:

You may see this error when trying to run PECL if your PHP installation does not have XML enabled by default, but instead XML support is usually loaded into your PHP installation via a PHP extension module (this could occur if the ./configure --disable-xml flag was specified when building PHP from source, or if you installed PHP via various package managers where that build of PHP is configured to load XML via an extension module).

Notice how the last line of the error output from PECL is XML Extension not found – the reason this error is appearing is because when PECL tries to use its XMLParser.php class it fails because it cannot access the XML extension (it checks for the XML module using extension_loaded('xml') around line 259 of the XMLParser.php source), and because the XML module is unavailable, it cannot parse its configuration/settings files and outputs all of the other errors seen above.

The reason this issue occurs is due to the way that PECL operates. The PECL command itself is just a shell script, which first works out where PHP is installed on your system installation, and then calls PHP on the command line with a number of flags before providing the path to the main PECL PHP script file. The problem flag which the PECL shell script is using is the -n option, which tells PHP to ignore any php.ini files (and therefore PHP will not load any of the additional extensions your php.ini file specifies, including in this case XML).

One can see the impact of the -n flag by running the following two commands:

  • first try running php -m on the command line
  • then compare the output to php -n -m

You should not see the XML extension listed when you run the second command because the -n flag told PHP not to parse our php.ini file(s).

If you run vi `which pecl` on the command line you should see the contents of the PECL command (as noted above, its just a shell script), and if you inspect the last line, you will see something like this:

exec $PHP -C -n -q $INCARG -d date.timezone=UTC -d output_buffering=1 -d variables_order=EGPCS -d safe_mode=0 -d register_argc_argv="On" $INCDIR/peclcmd.php "$@"

You should see the -n flag listed between the -C and -q flags. If you edit the PECL shell script, omitting the -n flag you should now be able to run PECL again without issues.

Alternatively, you can recompile PHP from source making sure that the XML module is compiled into the PHP binary instead of being loaded from a PHP extension module at run-time. Obviously editing the PECL shell script to remove the -n flag will only fix the issue until PECL/PEAR gets re-installed, hopefully however the maintainers of PECL/PEAR can update their repo with this fix. Ensuring PHP is built with XML support compiled in, is however a long-term fix to the solution, but may not be ideal for everyone's circumstances.

Just for completeness, if you run vi `which pear` you will see a very similar shell script to the one that PECL uses, however the -n flag is missing from the command which calls PHP and as such the PEAR command is not subject to these same issues.

Solution 2:

I just have faced this problem on ubuntu when i called for PECL command. The only thing that helped me is to install php-xml package. First check if you have the XML module already installed with

php -m

If you don't find it then you have to

sudo apt-get install php-pear

it will automatically install php-xml package. or you can just install xml like this (depending on the version of php you have)

sudo apt-get install php-xml php7.0-xml

If you find xml then you have remove it and reinstall it

sudo apt-get purge php*-xml
sudo apt-get autoremove php*-xml
sudo apt-get install php-xml php7.0-xml

If you have RPM as package manager you can use yum install php-xml and yum remove php-xml


Solution 3:

Im using php5.6.

Many answers recommend to install php-xml, but its not working for me, when I type specific version like

sudo apt-get install php5.6-xml

and everything works, maybe it will help others.


Solution 4:

you have to install php-xml package in order to fix "XML Extension not found" problem


Solution 5:

Remove any PEAR RPMs completely, then rm -rf /usr/share/pear/ then install pear again and all your modules.