You should use cli_set_process_title() ( http://php.net/manual/en/function.cli-set-process-title.php ) instead; it's less dangerous and less buggy, and part of PHP itself as of 5.5.
(PECL proctitle >= 0.1.0)
setproctitle — Définit le titre du processus
$title
) : voidDéfinit le titre du processus courant.
title
Le titre à utiliser comme titre du processus.
Aucune valeur n'est retournée.
Exemple #1 Exemple avec setproctitle()
L'exécution de l'exemple ci-dessous modifiera le titre du processus
(visible avec la commande ps a
par exemple).
<?php
setproctitle("myscript");
?>
L'exemple ci-dessus va afficher quelque chose de similaire à :
$ ps a PID TTY STAT TIME COMMAND 1168 pts/3 S 0:00 myscript
You should use cli_set_process_title() ( http://php.net/manual/en/function.cli-set-process-title.php ) instead; it's less dangerous and less buggy, and part of PHP itself as of 5.5.
Note that this extension is considered buggy. See https://wiki.php.net/rfc/cli_process_title, which says:
"...but it is incomplete and might lead to memory corruption on Linux (or any OS which does not support setproctitle.
The reason is the extension only has access to original argv[0] (that comes from main()). argv and environ(7) are in contiguous memory space on Linux. The extension presumes that argv[0] can accomodate 128 characters, but usually that is not possible because argv[0] is “php”. When this happens, the extension will scribble on argv[1], argv[2], etc., and maybe even environ and this can have destructive side effects on the running program."