On 06/23/2020 04:07 PM, Leon Fauster via CentOS wrote: > Am 23.06.20 um 17:35 schrieb H: >> On 06/23/2020 05:23 AM, Leon Fauster via CentOS wrote: >>> Am 22.06.20 um 22:27 schrieb H: >>>> It's been a while since I updated to php72 on this machine and there is some setting I must have forgotten. Apache, root and a user automatically get php72 when I run php in a terminal window, however, a php script picks up the wrong version of php, ie php54 and the version of php in /usr/bin/php is indeed version 5.4. >>>> >>>> I have googled without finding the answer but how do I make sure /all/ processes use php72 rather than the default 54 in CentOS 7? Surely there must be a better way than overwriting /usr/bin/php. What have I forgotten to do? >>>> >>>> Thank you. >>> >>> >>> If you want it in the terminal with php72 then switch to that context with (temporarily for this session): >>> >>> scl enable rh-php72 bash >>> >>> >>> if I am syntactically wrong about the collection name check it with >>> >>> scl --list >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Leon >>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> CentOS mailing list >>> CentOS at centos.org >>> https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >> >> I have that already but that only applies to new terminal sessions. The current issue is that systemd does not seem to pick up a global configuration of using php72 rather than the default php54. >> >> See https://access.redhat.com/solutions/527703 > > > I do not known what exactly you are trying but > for scripts you could pass the php binary with > full path or use a shebang like > > #!/opt/rh/rh-php72/root/usr/bin/php > > -- > Leon > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos Fixed, I realized I can specify the php executable in the systemd unit.