It should be noted that this can cause some vhost repair to be required, as some Apache directives changed in this version. We discovered together that the way to get it working was first to upgrade Apache from 2.2 to 2.4: sudo apt-get upgrade apache2 In answer to your supplementary question: it seems that you've followed the instructions here to add an unofficial repo to your version of Ubuntu, since the standard repo does not support 5.5. You can just configure the console version, or the Apache version, to use the version you want. I wouldn't bother deleting an old version, it might remove files that will stop things working. That will give you the versions of PHP you have installed. Now you can log back into phpMyAdmin and check the current version. So let's get the version for each: /home/xx/php-threaded/bin/php -v phpMyAdmin is a web-based application to manage MySQL and MariaDB databases using a graphical user interface (GUI). On Ubuntu 18.04 and other Linux distros there is a compatibility issues with PHP 7.2. Out of those, there are a few that look like PHP binaries. home/xx/Development/Personal/Project2/app/vendor/bin/phpunit home/xx/Development/Personal/Project1/webapp-backup/vendor/bin/phpunit The output for me for the above is: /home/xx/Development/Personal/Project1/webapp/bin/phpunit Since you have a Linux environment, you can run this on your console: locate bin/phpĪnd then for anything that looks like a PHP binary, get the version. You can check the installed php version with below command.
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