According to the php documentation about getenv, they are exactly the same, except that getenv will look for the variable in a case-insensitive manner when running on case-insensitive file systems (like Windows). On Linux hosts it still works as case-sensitive. Most of the time it probably doesn't matter, but one of the comments on the documentation explains:
For example on Windows $_SERVER['Path'] is like you see, with the first letter capitalized, not 'PATH' as you might expect.
Because of that, I would probably opt to use getenv to improve cross-platform behavior, unless you are certain about the casing of the environment variable you are trying to retrieve.
Steve Clay's comment in this answer highlights another difference:
Added getenv() advantage: you don't need to check isset/empty before access. getenv() won't emit notices.
This function is useful (compared to $_SERVER, $_ENV) because it searches $varname key in those array case-insensitive manner.
For example on Windows $_SERVER['Path'] is like you see Capitalized, not 'PATH' as you expected.
So just: <?php getenv('path') ?>
Additionally $_ENV is typically empty if variables_order does't have E listed. On many setups it's likely that only $_SERVER is populated, and $_ENV is strictly for CLI usage.
On the other hand getenv() accesses the environment directly.
Looking at the source code for the getenv function, this is because there are three ways that PHP can fetch the environment variable:
Via sapi_getenv (e.g. if it's getting the environment variable from Apache)
If on Windows, from GetEnvironmentVariableA.
If on non-Windows, from the getenv function provided by libc.
As far as I can tell, the only time when it will behave in a case-insensitive manner is on Windows because that's how the Windows environment variable API behaves. If you're on Linux, BSD, Mac, etc then getenv is still case sensitive.
As mentioned by mario, $_ENV is not always populated due to different configurations of variables_order so it's best if you avoid $_ENV if you don't control the server configuration.
So, for the most portable PHP code:
Use getenv.
Use the correct case for the environment variable name.
I found getenv() useful to avoid a strange PHP bug where sometimes $_SERVER and $_ENV was undefined if auto_globals_jit was enabled (creating the _SERVER and _ENV variables when they're first used). Since then I began to to use it.
I'd add that getenv() is a better choice because, as a function, it can be overloaded for testing purposes. Whereas overwriting your $_SERVER or $_ENV variables might interfere with test frameworks and other libraries and ultimately require a lot more work to carry out safely.
<?php
namespace neoistone;
class ns_env {
/**
* env to array file storage
*
* @param $envPath
*/
public static function envToArray(string $envPath)
{
$variables = [];
$mread = fopen($envPath, "r");
$content = fread($mread,filesize($envPath));
fclose($mread);
$lines = explode("\n", $content);
if($lines) {
foreach($lines as $line) {
// If not an empty line then parse line
if($line !== "") {
// Find position of first equals symbol
$equalsLocation = strpos($line, '=');
// Pull everything to the left of the first equals
$key = substr($line, 0, $equalsLocation);
// Pull everything to the right from the equals to end of the line
$value = substr($line, ($equalsLocation + 1), strlen($line));
$variables[$key] = $value;
} else {
$variables[] = "";
}
}
}
return $variables;
}
/**
* Array to .env file storage
*
* @param $array
* @param $envPath
*/
public static function arrayToEnv(array $array, string $envPath)
{
$env = "";
$position = 0;
foreach($array as $key => $value) {
$position++;
// If value isn't blank, or key isn't numeric meaning not a blank line, then add entry
if($value !== "" || !is_numeric($key)) {
// If passed in option is a boolean (true or false) this will normally
// save as 1 or 0. But we want to keep the value as words.
if(is_bool($value)) {
if($value === true) {
$value = "true";
} else {
$value = "false";
}
}
// Always convert $key to uppercase
$env .= strtoupper($key) . "=" . $value;
// If isn't last item in array add new line to end
if($position != count($array)) {
$env .= "\n";
}
} else {
$env .= "\n";
}
}
$mwrite = fopen($envPath, "w");
fwrite($mwrite, $env);
fclose($mwrite);
}
/**
* Json to .env file storage
*
* @param $json
* @param $envPath
*/
public static function JsonToEnv(array $json, string $envPath)
{
$env = "";
$position = 0;
$array = json_decode($json,true);
foreach($array as $key => $value) {
$position++;
// If value isn't blank, or key isn't numeric meaning not a blank line, then add entry
if($value !== "" || !is_numeric($key)) {
// If passed in option is a boolean (true or false) this will normally
// save as 1 or 0. But we want to keep the value as words.
if(is_bool($value)) {
if($value === true) {
$value = "true";
} else {
$value = "false";
}
}
// Always convert $key to uppercase
$env .= strtoupper($key) . "=" . $value;
// If isn't last item in array add new line to end
if($position != count($array)) {
$env .= "\n";
}
} else {
$env .= "\n";
}
}
$mwrite = fopen($envPath, "w");
fwrite($mwrite, $env);
fclose($mwrite);
}
/**
* XML to .env file storage
*
* @param $json
* @param $envPath
*/
public static function XmlToEnv(array $xml, string $envPath)
{
$env = "";
$position = 0;
$array = simplexml_load_string($xml);
foreach($array as $key => $value) {
$position++;
// If value isn't blank, or key isn't numeric meaning not a blank line, then add entry
if($value !== "" || !is_numeric($key)) {
// If passed in option is a boolean (true or false) this will normally
// save as 1 or 0. But we want to keep the value as words.
if(is_bool($value)) {
if($value === true) {
$value = "true";
} else {
$value = "false";
}
}
// Always convert $key to uppercase
$env .= strtoupper($key) . "=" . $value;
// If isn't last item in array add new line to end
if($position != count($array)) {
$env .= "\n";
}
} else {
$env .= "\n";
}
}
$mwrite = fopen($envPath, "w");
fwrite($mwrite, $env);
fclose($mwrite);
}
}
?>
I think the existing answers give a good overview of any differences in usage, but it might also be worth bearing in mind that the maintainers of the popular PHP library for loading environment variables recommend to avoid using getenv