I want to save an image from an URL to the user's local machine in PHP. Is this possible? I've been researching for a while, and I can't seem to find the answer. This is my code
function Save()
{
header('Content-Type: image/png');
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="thumbnail.png"');
imagepng("url?");
}
If there is a download link that the user clicks on, you can have it re-direct to the url of the file you want to serve directly, the client browser should handle the rest.
If the file needs to be re-served from your system having a php file that sets those headers and then echo's the imagepng output should do it.
Related
I'm outputting a PDF via PHP with the following code. $file is an object that contains data pertaining to the file being displayed.
header('Content-type: application/pdf');
header('Content-disposition: inline; filename="'.$file->name.'"');
#readfile($file->ServerPath());
My issue is that when I go to download the file in Chrome it will occasionally try to save the page instead of the PDF.
For example, say the URL that is displaying the file is mywebsite.com/file?file_id=1234. Most of the time it will try to save the file correctly as "file_name.pdf". However, sometimes chrome will try to save the file as "file" with no extension. This seems to happen randomly.
If it makes any difference the page displaying the file is being opened in a new tab. The issue happens regardless of whether I redirect via PHP or Javascript.
I really need to resolve this issue, as these PDFs will be accessible by users.
Thanks in advance.
With this little function I want to create a txt-file and command the browser to start the download.
The god news is, it works on my XAMPP. The bad news is, it doesen‘t work on my webserver. Instead of starting the Download, the file is displayed on the browser. What did I wrong?
public function sendAsFile() {
while (false !== ob_get_clean()) { };
header('Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8');
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="export.txt"');
echo $this->getString();
}
This question How to Automatically Start a Download in PHP? doesn't fixed my problem. That only works with a File on the Server, but i dont want to store every created file on my webspace. I want to create and download it immediately. I'm wondering cause it works on XAMPP but not in the WWW.
First post. I'm working on a project for a client where they have pdf files uploaded to a file structure (LAMP Stack) but the files have no extensions on them. Under the assumption that those files have to be PDF how would I get the browsers to understand that, and open them accordingly? Obviously with adding the file extensions this would suddenly work but I can't change the way their system works, it would result in too many changes and they are on a tight deadline. As for saving a temporary copy somewhere, I could do that, but I was hoping for a better solution. Is there a way to suggest to the browsers that they open a file a certain way?
Any thoughts guys/gals?
You just set the application type and file name in the headers, like so:
// This points to the file in question, note that it doesn't
// care whether it has an extension on the name or not.
$filePathOnDisk = '/path/to/your/pdffile';
// You can make this whatever you like, it doesn't have to
// be the same as the file name on the disk! This is the name of the file your end
// user will see when they are asked if they want to save. open, etc in the browser.
$fileName = 'file.pdf';
$data = file_get_contents($filePathOnDisk);
header("Content-type: application/pdf");
header("Content-disposition: attachment;filename=$fileName");
echo $data;
See PHP: stream remote pdf to client browser and Proper MIME media type for PDF files for reference as well.
Tested
You can use the following which will prompt the user to save the (PDF) file on their computer.
Notice the different file names.
One is the file that will be uploaded/prompted to the user download_example.pdf, while the other is the file without an extension as set in readfile('example');
<?php
header('Content-type: application/pdf');
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="download_example.pdf"');
readfile('example');
?>
This seems like it should be simple. I have a set of files I have to store outside of the webroot and have an access script to call them. I also need to sometimes tell a PDF that must be called via this proxy script to open at a specific page. Releveant part of the script below:
header('Content-type: application/pdf');
header('Content-Length: ' . filesize($file));
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="'.$file_name.'"');
readfile($file);
$file_name is just the basename() of the file, and $file is the path to the file, with #page=2, or #page=10, or whatever appended to it. If I remove the hashtag portion, the script works fine and the PDF opens with no errors. When the hashtag portion is there, all the programs tell me the PDF has been corrupted and can't be open.
I can't seem to find anything on here or Google as to what I need to do. Do I need to set an additional header to simulate the hash tag? Use exec() to call some command line code instead of using readfile()?
Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
You have to append the #page=2 (or whatever page you want to open) to the URL in the browser, not the filename in the proxy-script.
You currently try to open a file myFile.pdf#page=2 from the filesystem that does not exist as the filename is myFile.pdf
The feature to open a pdf-file on a specific page on the other hand is implemented in the browser or it's PDF-plugin. Therefore the information which page to open has to be given to the browser via the URL. So you should call your proxyscript like this: http://example.com/proxy.php?myFile.php#page=2
Update:
If you want to download the file and open it at a specific page every time the file is opened from the local file-system of the user, you will have to edit (or recreate) the PDF-File.
I have a simple form that, when posted back, calls a function to initiate a download. The path and file name are pulled from the database then I'm using headers to start the download. My code for the download is:
//START DOWNLOAD
header('Content-type: "application/octet-stream"');
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="'.$FILE_PATH.$FILE_NAME.'"');
header("Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary");
header("Connection: close")
In the example above, the $FILE_PATH variable is /downloads/software/ and the $FILE_NAME variable is client-installer.exe. So, what I would expect is a file called client-installer.exe (approximately 70MB) to be downloaded to the client. Instead, I get a file called _downloads_software_client-installer.exe and approximately 10KB.
I thought maybe I needed to urlencode the file path/name but that didn't fix the issue either. So I'm left thinking perhaps I have something wrong with the header but can't seem to find it.
Thank you!
The filename header just denotes what the file should be called. It must contain only a filename, not a path. The internal path on the server's hard disk is irrelevant and of no interest to the client. Your server will have to output the actual file data in the response, the client can't take it from the server given the path.
See readfile.