The PHP Selector in the Hostgator cPanel has been replaced with the MultiPHP Manager. I’m not sure when the change happened – functionally, MultiPHP Manager does what PHP Selector did – edits the Apache .htaccess configuration for you, allowing you to easily change the active PHP version.
I tried to use it when WordPress was complaining about an outdated PHP version, and it didn’t really work how I expected it to.
The MultiPHP Manager is available in the Hostgator cPanel.
The tool shows you the default PHP version (PHP 5.4) and has a section for applying PHP versions to specific domains.
Hostgator’s supported PHP versions are 7.0, 7.1, 7.2, and 7.3 – though PHP 7.4 is the current latest-and-greatest version.
The “ea-” prefix is the cPanel EasyApache versions of PHP. AFAIK they are functionally identical to your “vanilla” PHP versions. Details about EasyApache be found here.
Hostgator is a very popular hosting provider for WordPress. If you haven’t manually updated your PHP version (by editing the .htaccess) or used one of the cPanel controls, the WordPress dashboard will complain…
I used the tool to update my domain’s PHP version to 7.3. It successfully “took” but I was now getting an error about the PHP MySQL extension and a path being invalid.
The trick to fixing this error was to remove any sections in the domain folder’s .htaccess file…
# Use PHP71 as default
AddHandler application/x-httpd-php71 .php
<IfModule mod_suphp.c>
suPHP_ConfigPath /opt/php71/lib
</IfModule>
Or this…
#Use PHPedge as default
AddHandler application/x-httpd-php-edge .php
<IfModule mod_suphp.c>
suPHP_ConfigPath /opt/phpedge/lib
</IfModule>
I removed those sections, but WordPress still gave an error.
The trick is that there’s a .htaccess file in the root folder too, that seems to override any sub-folder below it – edit THAT file’s sections to not include old PHP handlers, and you’ll be up and running again.