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10.10 PHP mcrypt

發表於 : 2015-06-19 16:07:23
yehlu
http://coolestguidesontheplanet.com/ins ... nt-server/

Install mcrypt for php on Mac OSX 10.10 Yosemite for a Development Server

October 16, 2014 80 Comments
mcrypt is a file encryption method using secure techniques to exchange data. It is required for some web apps for example Magento, the shopping cart software or a php framework like Laravel. This tutorial has been tested in OSX 10.10 Yosemite.

This guide is really for users with the version of PHP that shipped with OSX Yosemite which is version 5.5.14. Other downloadable AMP stacks already have mcrypt baked in.



Command Line Tools

First up you will need the OSX 10.10 version of Command Line Tools which you can download via the Apple available updates in the App store.

Run in the Terminal

xcode-select --install


Getting it on in OS X Yosemite 10.10

This tutorial works mostly in the Terminal, launch it from /Applications/Utilities, change directory (cd) to the home account and make a directory that you will work in, call it mcrypt

cd ~ ; mkdir mcrypt ; cd mcrypt
Get libmcrypt 2.5.8 from Sourceforge, this is direct download link.

Get the php code in a tar.gz or .bz2 format- (version 5.5.14 is the one that currently ships with OSX 10.10)

Move both of these files that you downloaded into your working directory – mcrypt in this instance, and go back to Terminal

cd ~/mcrypt
Expand both files via the command line or just double click them in the Finder:

tar -zxvf libmcrypt-2.5.8.tar.gz
tar -zxvf php-5.5.9.tar.gz
Remove the compressed archives

rm *.gz
Any errors on the command line including C++ and g++ mostly are due to the command line tools missing.



Configuring libmcrypt

Change directory into libmcrypt
cd libmcrypt-2.5.8
Libmcrypt needs to be configured, enter
./configure
make
sudo make install
With the libmcrypt configured and libraries now installed, time for to make the mcrypt extension.



Install Autoconf

Install autoconf – some more Terminal heavy lifting:

cd ~/mcrypt
curl -O http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/autoconf/autoconf-latest.tar.gz
tar xvfz autoconf-latest.tar.gz
cd autoconf-2.69/
./configure
make
sudo make install


Compile mcrypt php Extension

cd ../php-5.5.9/ext/mcrypt/
/usr/bin/phpize
Output should be similar to:

Configuring for:
PHP Api Version: 20121113
Zend Module Api No: 20121212
Zend Extension Api No: 220121212

./configure
make
sudo make install
The result of this should be similar to:

Installing shared extensions: /usr/lib/php/extensions/no-debug-non-zts-20121212/



Enabling mcrypt.so php Extension

Open /etc/php.ini and add the line below at the end

extension=mcrypt.so
If there is no php.ini file, then you need to make one from php.ini.default in the same location like so:

sudo cp /etc/php.ini.default /etc/php.ini
And allow write capability

sudo chmod u+w /etc/php.ini
Then add the line as above in your favourite text editor:

sudo nano /etc/php.ini
or

sudo vi /etc/php.ini
and add in the line:

extension=mcrypt.so
Restart Apache

sudo apachectl restart
That’s it, create a php page with the function phpinfo(); to see if it loaded correctly.

osx-yosemite-mcrypt



If it didn’t load you may need to declare the extensions directory in /etc/php.ini

extension_dir = "/usr/lib/php/extensions/no-debug-non-zts-20100525/"
php-extension-directory-lion-mcrypt



Hopefully it wasn’t too much of a nightmare…