On Centos 5, and maybe other Red Hat based systems, any attempt to use file_get_contents to access a URL on an http port other than 80 (e.g. "http://www.example.com:8040/page") may fail with a permissions violation (error 13) unless the box you are running php on has its seLinux set to 'permissive' not 'enforcing' . Otherwise the request doesn't even get out of the box, i.e. the permissions violation is generated locally by seLinux.
file_get_contents
(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0, PHP 5)
file_get_contents — Leest een bestand volledig in een string
Beschrijving
string file_get_contents
( string $filename
[, int $use_include_path
[, resource $context
]] )
Hetzelfde als file(), behalve dat file_get_contents() het bestand terug geeft als een string.
Naar file_get_contents() gaat de voorkeur uit om de inhoud van een bestand in te lezen naar een string. Hij maakt gebruik van 'memory mapping' technieken als die worden ondersteund door je OS om de prestaties te verhogen.
Note: Deze functie is binary-safe
Tip
Je kunt een URL als bestandsnaam gebruiken met deze functie als de "fopen wrappers" aan staan. Zie fopen() voor meer informatie.
Note: Context support was added with PHP 5.0.0.
Zie ook: fgets(), file(), fread(), include(), en readfile().
file_get_contents
ken at wetken dot net
28-Oct-2009 02:00
28-Oct-2009 02:00
corey at effim dot com
09-Jun-2009 11:35
09-Jun-2009 11:35
In my dev environment with a relatively low-speed drive (standard SATA 7200RPM) reading a 25MB zip file in 10 times...
<?php
$data = `cat /tmp/test.zip`;
// 1.05 seconds
$fh = fopen('/tmp/test.zip', 'r');
$data = fread($fh, filesize('/tmp/test.zip'));
fclose($fh);
// 1.31 seconds
$data = file_get_contents('/tmp/test.zip');
// 1.33 seconds
?>
However, on a 21k text file running 100 iterations...
<?php
$data = `cat /tmp/test.txt`;
// 1.98 seconds
$fh = fopen('/tmp/test.txt', 'r');
$data = fread($fh, filesize('/tmp/test.txt'));
fclose($fh);
// 0.00082 seconds
$data = file_get_contents('/tmp/test.txt');
// 0.0069 seconds
?>
Despite the comment about file_get_contents being faster do to memory mapping, file_get_contents is slowest in both of the above examples. If you need the best performance out of your production box, you might want to throw together a script to check out which method is fastest for what size files on that particular machine, then optimize your code to check the file size and use the appropriate function for it.
colnector bla-at_bla colnect.com
10-Aug-2008 11:34
10-Aug-2008 11:34
A UTF-8 issue I've encountered is that of reading a URL with a non-UTF-8 encoding that is later displayed improperly since file_get_contents() related to it as UTF-8. This small function should show you how to address this issue:
<?php
function file_get_contents_utf8($fn) {
$content = file_get_contents($fn);
return mb_convert_encoding($content, 'UTF-8',
mb_detect_encoding($content, 'UTF-8, ISO-8859-1', true));
}
?>
EOD
07-Aug-2008 02:34
07-Aug-2008 02:34
if $filename has a relative path file_get_contents returns the uninterpreted sourcecode of the php-file with all comments etc.
I don't know whether this is a bug or intented or caused by server-configuration.
I think this behaviour should be included in the description of the function.
daniele dot ricci at staff dot dada dot net
05-Aug-2008 01:13
05-Aug-2008 01:13
I recently upgraded my server to Slackware 12.0.
After this, a program of mine stopped working: the call to file_get_contents (to an URL served by a custom HTTP server) was returning false without generating any error!
After some investigations I saw this: my custom HTTP server closes the connection at the end of the content. This (without the header "Connection: close") seems to cause the problem I described.
To solve the problem I simply added that header to the answer of my custom HTTP server.
pascalxusPLEASENOSPAM at yahoo dot com
19-Jul-2008 02:17
19-Jul-2008 02:17
if( false == ($str=file_get_contents( '../relative_path/test.txt' )))
echo "Could not read file.";
else
echo "File contents: $str";
# Note: if the file cannot be opened then file_get_contents will attempt to warn the following:
# Warning: file_get_contents(filename): failed to open stream
http://www.codesplunk.com/nr/questions/php1.html
joachimb at gmail dot com
15-Apr-2008 11:38
15-Apr-2008 11:38
Setting the timeout properly without messing with ini values:
<?php
$ctx = stream_context_create(array(
'http' => array(
'timeout' => 1
)
)
);
file_get_contents("http://example.com/", 0, $ctx);
?>
3n1gm4 [at] gmail [dot] com
02-Apr-2008 11:12
02-Apr-2008 11:12
This is a nice and simple substitute to get_file_contents() using curl, it returns FALSE if $contents is empty.
<?php
function curl_get_file_contents($URL)
{
$c = curl_init();
curl_setopt($c, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, 1);
curl_setopt($c, CURLOPT_URL, $URL);
$contents = curl_exec($c);
curl_close($c);
if ($contents) return $contents;
else return FALSE;
}
?>
Hope this help, if there is something wrong or something you don't understand let me know :)
jose dot nobile at gmail dot com
29-Jan-2008 08:29
29-Jan-2008 08:29
<?PHP
//PHP 4.2.x Compatibility function
if (!function_exists('file_get_contents')) {
function file_get_contents($filename, $incpath = false, $resource_context = null)
{
if (false === $fh = fopen($filename, 'rb', $incpath)) {
trigger_error('file_get_contents() failed to open stream: No such file or directory', E_USER_WARNING);
return false;
}
clearstatcache();
if ($fsize = @filesize($filename)) {
$data = fread($fh, $fsize);
} else {
$data = '';
while (!feof($fh)) {
$data .= fread($fh, 8192);
}
}
fclose($fh);
return $data;
}
}
?>
php [spat] hm2k.org
16-Jan-2008 12:58
16-Jan-2008 12:58
I decided to make a similar function to this, called file_post_contents, it uses POST instead of GET to call, kinda handy...
<?php
function file_post_contents($url,$headers=false) {
$url = parse_url($url);
if (!isset($url['port'])) {
if ($url['scheme'] == 'http') { $url['port']=80; }
elseif ($url['scheme'] == 'https') { $url['port']=443; }
}
$url['query']=isset($url['query'])?$url['query']:'';
$url['protocol']=$url['scheme'].'://';
$eol="\r\n";
$headers = "POST ".$url['protocol'].$url['host'].$url['path']." HTTP/1.0".$eol.
"Host: ".$url['host'].$eol.
"Referer: ".$url['protocol'].$url['host'].$url['path'].$eol.
"Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded".$eol.
"Content-Length: ".strlen($url['query']).$eol.
$eol.$url['query'];
$fp = fsockopen($url['host'], $url['port'], $errno, $errstr, 30);
if($fp) {
fputs($fp, $headers);
$result = '';
while(!feof($fp)) { $result .= fgets($fp, 128); }
fclose($fp);
if (!$headers) {
//removes headers
$pattern="/^.*\r\n\r\n/s";
$result=preg_replace($pattern,'',$result);
}
return $result;
}
}
?>
francois hill
03-Dec-2007 05:56
03-Dec-2007 05:56
Seems file looks for the file inside the current working (executing) directory before looking in the include path, even with the FILE_USE_INCLUDE_PATH flag specified.
Same behavior as include actually.
By the way I feel the doc is not entirely clear on the exact order of inclusion (see include). It seems to say the include_path is the first location to be searched, but I have come across at least one case where the directory containing the file including was actually the first to be searched.
Drat.
bearachute at gmail dot com
11-Jul-2007 11:38
11-Jul-2007 11:38
If you're having problems with binary and hex data:
I had a problem when trying to read information from a ttf, which is primarily hex data. A binary-safe file read automatically replaces byte values with their corresponding ASCII characters, so I thought that I could use the binary string when I needed readable ASCII strings, and bin2hex() when I needed hex strings.
However, this became a problem when I tried to pass those ASCII strings into other functions (namely gd functions). var_dump showed that a 5-character string contained 10 characters, but they weren't visible. A binary-to-"normal" string conversion function didn't seem to exist and I didn't want to have to convert every single character in hex using chr().
I used unpack with "c*" as the format flag to see what was going on, and found that every other character was null data (ordinal 0). To solve it, I just did
str_replace(chr(0), "", $string);
which did the trick.
This took forever to figure out so I hope this helps people reading from hex data!
tobsn at php dot net
02-May-2007 06:26
02-May-2007 06:26
you'll find the http response headers in: $http_response_header
;o)
Greg Ambrose (greg at catalina-it dot com dot au)
17-Apr-2007 06:37
17-Apr-2007 06:37
[Editors note: As of PHP 5.2.1 you can specify `timeout` context option and pass the context to file_get_contents()]
The only way I could get get_file_contents() to wait for a very slow http request was to set the socket timeout as follows.
ini_set('default_socket_timeout', 120);
$a = file_get_contents("http://abcxyz.com");
Other times like execution time and input time had no effect.
siegfri3d at gmail dot com
05-Dec-2006 09:52
05-Dec-2006 09:52
Use the previous example if you want to request the server for a special part of the content, IF and only if the server accepts the method.
If you want a simple example to ask the server for all the content, but only save a portion of it, do it this way:
<?
$content=file_get_contents("http://www.google.com",FALSE,NULL,0,20);
echo $content;
?>
This will echo the 20 first bytes of the google.com source code.
fcicqbbs at gmail dot com
04-Aug-2006 10:55
04-Aug-2006 10:55
the bug #36857 was fixed.
http://bugs.php.net/36857
Now you may use this code,to fetch the partial content like this:
<?php
$context=array('http' => array ('header'=> 'Range: bytes=1024-', ),);
$xcontext = stream_context_create($context);
$str=file_get_contents("http://www.fcicq.net/wp/",FALSE,$xcontext);
?>
that's all.
richard dot quadling at bandvulc dot co dot uk
15-Nov-2005 11:47
15-Nov-2005 11:47
If, like me, you are on a Microsoft network with ISA server and require NTLM authentication, certain applications will not get out of the network. SETI@Home Classic and PHP are just 2 of them.
The workaround is fairly simple.
First you need to use an NTLM Authentication Proxy Server. There is one written in Python and is available from http://apserver.sourceforge.net/. You will need Python from http://www.python.org/.
Both sites include excellent documentation.
Python works a bit like PHP. Human readable code is handled without having to produce a compiled version. You DO have the opportunity of compiling the code (from a .py file to a .pyc file).
Once compiled, I installed this as a service (instsrv and srvany - parts of the Windows Resource Kit), so when the server is turned on (not logged in), the Python based NTLM Authentication Proxy Server is running.
Then, and here is the bit I'm really interested in, you need to tell PHP you intend to route http/ftp requests through the NTLM APS.
To do this, you use contexts.
Here is an example.
<?php
// Define a context for HTTP.
$aContext = array(
'http' => array(
'proxy' => 'tcp://127.0.0.1:8080', // This needs to be the server and the port of the NTLM Authentication Proxy Server.
'request_fulluri' => True,
),
);
$cxContext = stream_context_create($aContext);
// Now all file stream functions can use this context.
$sFile = file_get_contents("http://www.php.net", False, $cxContext);
echo $sFile;
?>
Hopefully this helps SOMEONE!!!
aidan at php dot net
31-Jan-2005 08:23
31-Jan-2005 08:23
This functionality is now implemented in the PEAR package PHP_Compat.
More information about using this function without upgrading your version of PHP can be found on the below link:
http://pear.php.net/package/PHP_Compat
