How to get an unknown web directory name? - php

I have a web root directory which is setup like this:
apps_unknown_dir
|__ mylife.php
.htaccess
index.html
get-app-dir-name.php
The problem is that the application directory [apps_unknown_dir] name is periodically or randomly gets changed. I would like to have a code into the file “get-app-dir-name.php” that will echo the new apps unknown directory name when run.
How can I go about getting the apps unknown directory name?

I'd iterate over folders in that directory, looking for one that's not on known-list, or that has mylife.php file in it.
You may do it like in answers to that question: how to get all subdirectories that has specific folder name in php?

Just from the top of my head you could try this: (warning untested code)
$knownFolders = array('folderIKnow', 'folderKnown', 'anotherFolderNameIKnow');
$unknown = array_diff(glob("/folder/to/app/*", GLOB_ONLYDIR), $knownFolders);
echo $unknown;
So you have a list of known folders, then scan the folder for all directories, see the difference between the scan and the white-list.

Related

Laravel - Using allfiles gives back empty array

I've been using laravel for nearly all my projects and I've came across a problem when trying to list all files in a directory.
Here is my code below:
$directory = ("upload/"."$username->username");
$scanned_directory = storage::allfiles($directory);
So as you can see First line is the directory which is in Upload followed by the username of the account.
The second line is meant to scan this directory and list only files. Sadly it always gives me back an empty array. Using Scandir() here works... But it gives me folders which I'm not wanting.
So... Any tips? I checked the API and I really can't see what is wrong here :(
The reason you're getting no results when using the Storage::allFiles('directory') method is this method only looks inside of your application's storage folder, usually storage/app. Hence why modifying the storage path in configuration works as mentioned by #yassine (you shouldn't do this).
If you wish to use files outside of the storage folder, simply use the File facade instead. e.g. File::allFiles('directory')
Me too i had the same issue for local storage. I fixed it by :
project/config/filesystems.php
line 44
changed root folder to from storage_path('app') to changed to
base_path()
then I provided a related path to the root folder in Storage::files() or Storage::allfiles().
Like Storage::allfiles("app") if I want to fetch files withing the sub folder "app" relative to the base path given in the config file.
Good luck
$direcotry has to be an absolute path from your laravel root folder.
When your uploaded folder is in the root folder try this
$directory = base_path("upload/"."$username->username");
$scanned_directory = storage::allfiles($directory);

Find filepath to public_html directory or it's equivalent using PHP

I'm creating a .php file that will be uploaded to the root directory of a server. I need that .php file to then figure out the path to the public_html folder or it's equivalent.
I need to do this because I want my .php file to be able to be uploaded to the root and used on any hosting account. Because many hosting companies use different file paths to the public_html folder or even call it something different, I'm trying to figure out how to detect it.
Preferable there is a server variable or easy test to do this. If not, the public_html folder will always contain a particular file so maybe I could search for this particular file and get the path that way. I'm just worried about a filename search being heavy on memory.
The .php file that is being executed is located inside the ROOT directory and needs to locate the public_html folder.
Like this: /home/user/file.php
needs to detect
/home/user/public_html/ or /home/user/var/www/ or /home/user/website.com/html/ etc.
The challenge with this is that a server can have very many public_html's so outside of the context of a request there is no real way to find out what that is.
One thing that you might be able to do to get this information from a php script (if you know the url to get to the host) is to create a php file called docroot.php that looks like this.
<?php
if ($_SERVER["REMOTE_ADDR"] == '127.0.0.1'){
echo $_SERVER["DOCUMENT_ROOT"];
}
Then within your file.php your would do something like
$docRoot = trim(file_get_contents("http://www.mydomain.com/docroot.php"));
This makes the assumption that the server can resolve to itself via the local interface by name.
I found this website which provided me with the only good solution I have found after scouring the web...
$root = preg_replace("!${_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']}$!", "", $_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']);
The way this works is by getting the full path of the file and then removing the relative path of the file from the full path.

put config in secure place, can not link the files

Am trying to use a config file for a database and rating script but the problem is the config file is in this directory :
website.com/include/config.php aka websitename/include/config.php
The rating script needs the config and is accessed like this:
include_once("config.php");
I want the config to be in:
"/files/website/"
A directory level up from the website root folder.
I have been trying with:
"../files/website/" and other variations but can not figure out how to link them.
I have managed to put one config file and access it, but with this ajax rating script the only way for it to work is to have the config in the /include/ folder next to:
rating_process.php - has this link : include("inc/config.php");
rating_functions.php - has this link : include_once("config.php");
rating_total_functions.php - has this link : include("inc/config.php");
Hope i've explained myself here
Right, looking at my hosting now:
$_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']; outputs this: /foldy/homepages/11/username/htdocs/webbysite
My index file is located at: /foldy/homepages/11/username/htdocs/webbysite/index.php
The included rating script is located in: /foldy/homepages/11/username/htdocs/webbysite/include/
I want the config to be in /foldy/homepages/11/username/htdocs/secretfiles/config.php
Am trying to some how go out of: webbysite folder and then into secretfiles (sibling folders)
I have tried adding ../ and so on, but am missing something obviously :(
Try
$configLocation = $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'].'../files/website/config.php';
include_once($configLocation)
but the problem is the config file is in this directory
it is not a problem at all.
just keep it as is.
Concerning your particular problem, your problem is that you don't know where you want to put your file. /files/website/ is not likely a right path and it is apparently not one level high from webroot.
So, first of all make your mind about the right path to the directory and it's relative position to the web root
if you are concerned about security ( because your config file contains the db details ) i would place the db config file outside the site root folder and then require_once('../../dbConfig.php') from the script that's creating xml or json for your ajax
more exactly ...
your site folder might be here: /var/www/html
set a virtual host (done differently on Linux and Windows) and point your domain to a sub folder inside /html so that the new path to the site root is /var/www/html/site.
then place your config file in /var/www/html and call it from your scripts inside your /site folder using require_once('../dbConfig.php)`.
your db details are outside the site folder

Include files from parent or other directory

I'm needing to include a file from the parent directory, and other sub-directories, into a sub-directory. I've done it before by simply using include('/rootdirectory/file.php'); but now it won't seem to work.
Just wondering how I can do this, thanks.
Here's my exact line:
include('/forums/groups.php');
It's giving me this error(the page still runs):
Warning: include(/forums/groups.php) [function.include]: failed to
open stream: No such file or directory in
C:\xampp\htdocs\forums\blog\posts.php on line
Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening
'/forums/groups.php' for inclusion
(include_path='.;C:\xampp\php\PEAR') in
C:\xampp\htdocs\forums\blog\posts.php on line 3
include() and its relatives take filesystem paths, not web paths relative to the document root. To get the parent directory, use ../
include('../somefilein_parent.php');
include('../../somefile_2levels_up.php');
If you begin with a /, an absolute system file path will be used:
// Full absolute path...
include('/home/username/sites/project/include/config.php');
If your server is not resolving the file from the parent directory using
include '../somefilein_parent.php'
try this (using the parent directory relative to the script):
include __DIR__ . "/../somefilein_parent.php";
Here's something I wrote with that problem in mind:
<?
function absolute_include($file)
{
/*
$file is the file url relative to the root of your site.
Yourdomain.com/folder/file.inc would be passed as
"folder/file.inc"
*/
$folder_depth = substr_count($_SERVER["PHP_SELF"] , "/");
if($folder_depth == false)
$folder_depth = 1;
include(str_repeat("../", $folder_depth - 1) . $file);
}
?>
hope it helps.
Depends on where the file you are trying to include from is located.
Example:
/rootdir/pages/file.php
/someotherDir/index.php
If you wrote the following in index.php:
include('/rootdir/pages/file.php');it would error becuase it would try to get:
/someotherDir/rootdir/pages/file.php Which of course doesn't exist...
So you would have to use include('../rootdir/pages/file.php');
In laymans terms, and practicality, I see this as an old DOS trick/thing. Whoa! What was that? DOS? Never heard of it!
".." backs you out of the current sub-directory one time to a higher folder/directory, and .. enter typed twice backs you out too 2 higher parent folders. Keep adding the ".. enter" back to back and you will soon find yourself at the top level of the directory.
As for Newbies to understand this better, consider this (in terms of the home PC or "C:\ drive" if you know what that means, rather than the web-servers/host "root directory" ). While your at it, Consider your website existing somewhere on your home PC's hard drive, buried in some folder under the C:\ drive. Lastly, you can think of it as ".." is back one directory and "/" is forward one directory/folder.
Now!
If you are using the command prompt and are within the "myDocuments" folder of your PC you must back out of that folder to get closer to the higher directory "C:\" by typing the "../".
If you wanted to access a file that is located in the widows directory while you are still in the myDocuments folder you would theoretically type ../windows; in reality of DOS command prompt you would simply type .., but I am setting you up for the web. The / redirects forward to another directory naturally.
Using "myDocuments" lets pretend that you created 2 folders within it called "PHP1" and "PHP2", in such we now have the folders:
C:\myDocuments\PHP1
C:\myDocuments\PHP2
In PHP1 you place a file called index.php. and in PHP2 folder you placed a file called Found.php. it now becomes:
C:\myDocuments\PHP1\index.php
C:\myDocuments\PHP2\found.php
Inside the
C:\myDocuments\PHP1\index.php file you would need to edit and type something like:
<?php include ('../php2/found.php')?>
The ../ is positional thus it considers your current file location "C:\myDocuments\PHP1\index.php" and is a directive telling it to back out of PHP1 directory and enter or move forward into PHP2 directory to look for the Found.php file. But does it read it? See my thoughts on trouble shooting below.
Now! suppose you have 1 folder PHP1 and a sub-folder PHP2:
C:\myDocuments\PHP1\PHP2
you would simply reference/code
<?php include('/PHP2/found.php') ?>
as PHP2 exist as a sub-directory, below or within PHP1 directory.
If the above does not work it may have something to do with access/htaccess or permission to the directory or a typo. To enhance this...getting into trouble shooting...If the "found.php" file has errors/typo's within it, it will crash upon rendering at the error, such could be the reason (require/require_once) that you are experiencing the illusion that it is not changing directories or accessing the file.
At last thought on the matter, you may need to instantiate your functions or references in order to use the included/require "whatever" by creating a new variable or object such as
$newObject = new nameobject("origianlThingy");
Remember, just because you are including/requiring something, sometimes means just that, it is included/required to run, but it might need to be recreated to make it active or access it. New will surely re-create an instance of it "if it is readable" and make it available within the current document while preserving the original. However you should reference the newly created variable $newObject in all instances....if its global.
To put this in perspective of some web host account; the web host is some whopping over sized hard-drive (like that on your PC) and your domain is nothing more than a folder they have assigned to you. Your folder is called the root. Inside that folder you can do anything you are allowed to do.
your "one of many ways" to move between directories/folders is to use the ../ however many times to back out of your current in reference to folder position you want to find.
In my drunken state I realize that I know too much to be sane, and not
enough to be insane!"
Any path beginning with a slash will be an absolute path. From the root-folder of the server and not the root-folder of your document root. You can use ../ to go into the parent directory.
You may interest in using php's inbuilt function realpath().
and passing a constant DIR
for example:
$TargetDirectory = realpath(__DIR__."/../.."); //Will take you 2 folder's back
String realpath() :: Returns canonicalized absolute pathname ..
I took inspiration from frank and I added something like this in my "settings.php" file that is then included in all pages when there is a link:
"settings.php"
$folder_depth = substr_count($_SERVER["PHP_SELF"] , "/");
$slash="";
for ($i=1;$i<=($folder_depth-2);++$i){
$slash= $slash."../";
}
in my header.php to be included in all pages:
a href= .... php echo $slash.'index.php'....
seems it works both on local and hosted environment....
(NOTE: I am an absolute beginner )
Had same issue earlier solved like this :
include('/../includes/config.php'); //note '/' appearing before '../includes/config.php'
the root directory (in PHP) is the directory of the file that is pinged. For example, I go to http://localhost/directory/to/file/index.php, the root directory will be "/dictory/to/file", since it's the one that you've made a web request for.
I can't believe none of the answers pointed to the function dirname() (available since PHP 4).
Basically, it returns the full path for the referenced object. If you use a file as a reference, the function returns the full path of the file. If the referenced object is a folder, the function will return the parent folder of that folder.
https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.dirname.php
For the current folder of the current file, use $current = dirname(__FILE__);.
For a parent folder of the current folder, simply use $parent = dirname(__DIR__);.
If your configuration file PHP.ini is set up correctly then you can use:
include($_SERVER["DOCUMENT_ROOT"]."/my_script.php");
// or
require($_SERVER["DOCUMENT_ROOT"]."/my_script.php");

PHP File Directory - $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']'s parent folder

I know $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] returns the document root (most likely something like /home/user/public_html), but is there any way to get the parent directory of this folder? (i.e. just /home/user/)
I would try and replace common folder names like public_html or www, but it's not a given that the folder would be named that on all systems I want this code to run on.
FYI: I'm trying to implement this, but i want the user to be able to select their FTP root folder, which is most commonly the parent of the Document Root folder.
Any thoughts?
dirname($_SERVER["DOCUMENT_ROOT"]);

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