37

I am trying to install PHP on my Mac machine using Homebrew. I am using the following command: brew install php

However, I am getting the following errors:

Error: No available formula with the name "php" 
==> Searching for similarly named formulae...
Error: No similarly named formulae found.
==> Searching taps...
Error: No formulae found in taps.

5 Answers 5

62

Update

In February 2018, the php72 formula (the current version of PHP at that time) has been moved into the core Homebrew tap and renamed as php.

The homebrew/php tap has been deprecated in January 2018 and then archived on March 31, 2018. The formulas it contained are not available any more.

Since February 2018, installing PHP using Homebrew is as easy as:

$ brew install php

The older PHP versions that are still maintained can be installed using the new @ convention for versions (PHP 7.1 is [email protected]).


The original answer (not usable any more)

The PHP ecosystem lives in the homebrew/php tap. You can find there six versions of the interpreter (from 5.3 to 7.1), extensions for them and some PHP-related tools.

In order to install PHP you have to install the homebrew/php tap first (this is needed only once):

$ brew tap homebrew/php
$ brew install php70

Or you can do both operations in a single step by running:

$ brew install homebrew/php/php70

You could discover all these by searching php first:

$ brew search php
5
  • Update to the latest version: $ brew tap homebrew/homebrew-php then brew install php72. Or you can check options how to install php72 brew options php72. Aug 20, 2017 at 19:23
  • 1
    Also note with the March 2018 update, all the php-XXX extension modules are no longer in homebrew, you have to use pecl to install them. For me, I used to brew install php72-yaml now I have to pecl channel-update pecl.php.net followed by pecl install yaml. This might require you to install some build tools like autoconf as well if you don't already have them.
    – vick
    Apr 5, 2018 at 20:18
  • Error: homebrew/php was deprecated. This tap is now empty as all its formulae were migrated. Jan 18, 2019 at 4:10
  • Unless you need a specific version of PHP for matching your production environment, which is always a good idea, and most often a requirement in real life. What if you have several clients with different versions in production? Check out phpenv for that. May 22, 2020 at 19:21
  • Thanks, that worked for me, I'm on Big Sur macOS 11.1 Jan 11, 2021 at 14:15
26

After installing PHP with brew,

brew install [email protected]

or any version you need(could be: [email protected])

run this command to ensure you have PHP installed: brew list | grep php then you need to manually add an alias as follows:

alias php='/usr/local/Cellar/[email protected]/7.3.13/bin/php'

Then, for the change to take effect you need to refresh your terminal. You can use: source ~/.bash_profile command, or close and open terminal.

5
  • 5
    Thanks, that worked for me. I thought the whole point of homebrew was to take care of these configuration tweaks...
    – pixeline
    Mar 26, 2020 at 17:04
  • 1
    @pixeline : It would be a nightmare for the developer (and OS) if tools that's already installed by macOS (like the php command) suddenly got swapped out with a different version. You should NOT use an alias as mentioned over! Specifying version numbers in an alias only works until the next minor version and what about the other tools that PHP needs from the bin directory? Use this at the end of your shell startup script instead: export PATH="${HOMEBREW_PREFIX}/opt/[email protected]/bin:${PATH}" Then all commands for 7.3.x (not just php) is available and chosen first. May 12, 2020 at 0:02
  • 1
    BTW! I've mapped the variable $HOMEBREW_PREFIX used in the comment above to the output of eval $(brew --prefix), as in: export HOMEBREW_PREFIX="$(brew --prefix)" Good idea to mention 😅This is usually /usr/local but mapping it to a variable makes it more portable. May 12, 2020 at 0:39
  • additional : after put alias in bash_profile you might need to restart terminal. it works well. and for the path you can search in your own because current [email protected]/7.xxxxxxxx/bin is not the same. Jun 18, 2020 at 11:02
  • After running brew install [email protected] I get Error: [email protected] has been disabled because it is a versioned formula! Mar 2, 2022 at 17:55
25

I ran into this error in 2021 using Mac OS Big Sur. Running the below commands helped me out

  1. rm -rf $(brew --repo homebrew/core)
  2. brew tap homebrew/core
  3. brew install php

Link to source

3
  • 3
    You made my day mate, yesterday my macos updated and PHP not working, now after spending more than 8 hours, my PHP got installed thank you so much Nov 3, 2021 at 14:16
  • 2
    This solution worked for me (macOS Monterey) Jan 24, 2022 at 0:54
  • 1
    This helped me so much. Feb 28, 2022 at 20:19
0

you can run

brew doctor

to see which branch is being used for some reasons some of the formulas are not on the origin....so kindly checkout to master on brew

git -C $(brew --repo homebrew/core) checkout master

and then try to run

brew search php

to see if its listed

0

I found this solution:

brew install shivammathur/php/[email protected]
brew install shivammathur/php/[email protected]
brew install shivammathur/php/[email protected]
brew install shivammathur/php/[email protected]
brew install shivammathur/php/[email protected]

And switching with:

brew link --overwrite [email protected]

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