Debug with a PHP web page debug configuration
In this debugging mode, IntelliJ IDEA fully controls the debugging process: it launches the application, opens the browser, and activates the debugging engine according to a PHP Web Page debug configuration.
A PHP Web Page debug configuration tells IntelliJ IDEA the URL address to access the starting page of the application, the browser to open the starting page in, and the debug server configuration to use.
You can also specify the scripts requests to which you want IntelliJ IDEA to ignore during debugging. This approach can be useful, when your application contains scripts that use AJAX. Suppose you have a menu-ajax-script.php that "reloads" a part of your web page. This script works properly so you do not need to debug it. However, this script is still requested during the debugging session. To have incoming connections to this script ignored, add the menu-ajax-script.php script to the skipped paths list.
Install the PHP plugin
This functionality relies on the PHP plugin, which you need to install and enable.
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open the IDE settings and select
.Open the Marketplace tab, find the PHP plugin, and click Install (restart the IDE if prompted).
Prepare the debugging engine
Before you start debugging, make sure that you have a debugging engine installed and configured properly. IntelliJ IDEA supports debugging with two most popular tools: Xdebug and Zend Debugger. These tools cannot be used simultaneously because they block each other. To avoid this problem, you need to update the corresponding sections in the php.ini file as described in Configure Xdebug and Configure Zend Debugger.
Open the active php.ini file in the editor:
In the Settings dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S), click PHP under Languages & Frameworks.
On the PHP reference page that opens, click next to the CLI Interpreter field.
In the CLI Interpreters dialog that opens, the Configuration file read-only field shows the path to the active php.ini file. Click Open in Editor.
Set breakpoints
Breakpoints are source code markers used to trigger actions during a debugging session. Typically, the purpose behind setting a breakpoint is to suspend program execution to allow you to examine program data. However, IntelliJ IDEA can use breakpoints as triggers for a variety of different actions. Breakpoints can be set at any time during the debugging process. Your breakpoints don't affect your source files directly, but the breakpoints and their settings are saved with your IntelliJ IDEA project so you can reuse them across debugging sessions.
Place the caret at the desired line of the source code.
Breakpoints can be set in the PHP context inside php, html, and files of other types. Line breakpoints can be set only on executable lines, but not on comments, declarations, or empty lines.
Do one of the following:
Click the gutter area at a line where you want to toggle a breakpoint.
From the main menu, choose
.Press Ctrl+F8.
Create a debug configuration of the type PHP Web Page
Open the Run/Debug Configuration dialog by doing one of the following:
From the main menu, choose
.Press Alt+Shift+F10, then press 0 to display the Edit Configuration dialog or select the configuration from the popup and press F4.
Click on the toolbar or press Insert. From the list, select the PHP Web Page configuration type. The PHP Web Page dialog opens.
Specify the configuration name.
Choose the applicable debug server configuration from the Server list or click Browse . and define a debug server configuration in the Servers dialog that opens as described in Create a PHP debug server configuration.
In the Start URL field, type the server path to the file that implements the application starting page. Specify the path relative to the server configuration root ( The server configuration root is the highest folder in the file tree on the local or remote server accessible through the server configuration. For in-place servers, it is the project root. ). The read-only field below shows the URL address of the application starting page. The URL address is composed dynamically as you type.
Specify the browser to open the application in. Choose a configured browser from the Browser list or click Browse and specify another browser in the Web Browsers and Preview dialog that opens.
Initiate a debugging session and examining the suspended program
To start debugging, click the Debug button on the toolbar.
As soon as the debugger suspends on reaching the first breakpoint, examine the application by analyzing frames. A frame corresponds to an active method or function call and stores the local variables of the called method or function, the arguments to it, and the code context that enables expression evaluation. All currently active frames are displayed on the Frames pane of the Debug tool window, where you can switch between them and analyze the information stored therein in the Variables and Watches panes. For more details, see the section Examine suspended program.
Continue running the program and examine its frames as soon as it is suspended again.
To control the program execution manually, step through the code using the commands under the Run menu or toolbar buttons: F7, Shift+F8, F8, and others. For more details, see Step through the program.
To have the program run automatically up to the next breakpoint, resume the session by choosing
or pressing F9.
Specify scripts to skip requests to
This approach can be useful, when your application contains scripts that use AJAX. Suppose you have a menu-ajax-script.php that "reloads" a part of your web page. This script works properly so you do not need to debug it. However, this script is still requested during the debugging session. To have incoming connections to this script ignored, add the menu-ajax-script.php script to the skipped paths list.
In the Settings dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S), go to .
On the Skipped Paths page that opens, configure an "ignore list" of scripts and folders with scripts not to be invoked if IntelliJ IDEA receives incoming connections to them.
To add a new entry to the list, click the or press Alt+Insert. Then click and in the dialog that opens choose the file or folder to skip connections to.
To remove an entry from the list, select it and click or press Alt+Delete. The script will be now executed upon receiving requests to it.
To have IntelliJ IDEA inform you every time it receives a request to a script to be skipped, select the Notify about skipped paths checkbox.