On my website I have my pages in this format:
www.mysite.com/45.php
www.mysite.com/81.php
www.mysite.com/58.php
www.mysite.com/415.php
I have the numbers in order. How can I get the largest number which is in this case 415 and store it in a var. I tried this:
<?php
for ($urlCheck = 1000000; ; $urlCheck--){
if (file_exists()){
echo "true";
break;
}
}
?>
but I am not sure how I get this thing to work.
You will have to save the "current largest number" somewhere when you add a page, otherwise (with any solutions that try to find it out on the spot) the performance is going to be atrocious.
For a slow implementation that's still less slow than others you may come up with, you can use this:
$files = scandir('.'); // assume we are looking in the current directory
natsort($files);
$largest = intval(end($files)); // sample value: "415"
// a url looks like: http://www.mysite.com
// a path looks like: /home/vhosts/www.mysite.com/public
$path = getcwd(); // get current path (needs to be where 45.php etc is)
chdir($path); // go there
$files = scandir('.'); // we are looking in the current directory
natsort($files);
$largest = intval(end($files)); // sample value: "415"
$filename = end($files);
// if you just want the number from a filename:
$number=preg_replace('/[^\d]/','',$filename);
Related
I am trying to make a PHP application which searches through the files of your current directory and looks for a file in every subdirectory called email.txt, then it gets the contents of the file and compares the contents from email.txt with the given query and echoes all the matching directories with the given query. But it does not work and it looks like the problem is in the if-else part of the script at the end because it doesn't give any output.
<?php
// pulling query from link
$query = $_GET["q"];
echo($query);
echo("<br>");
// listing all files in doc directory
$files = scandir(".");
// searching trough array for unwanted files
$downloader = array_search("downloader.php", $files);
$viewer = array_search("viewer.php", $files);
$search = array_search("search.php", $files);
$editor = array_search("editor.php", $files);
$index = array_search("index.php", $files);
$error_log = array_search("error_log", $files);
$images = array_search("images", $files);
$parsedown = array_search("Parsedown.php", $files);
// deleting unwanted files from array
unset($files[$downloader]);
unset($files[$viewer]);
unset($files[$search]);
unset($files[$editor]);
unset($files[$index]);
unset($files[$error_log]);
unset($files[$images]);
unset($files[$parsedown]);
// counting folders
$folderamount = count($files);
// defining loop variables
$loopnum = 0;
// loop
while ($loopnum <= $folderamount + 10) {
$loopnum = $loopnum + 1;
// gets the emails from every folder
$dirname = $files[$loopnum];
$email = file_get_contents("$dirname/email.txt");
//checks if the email matches
if ($stremail == $query) {
echo($dirname);
}
}
//print_r($files);
//echo("<br><br>");
?>
Can someone explain / fix this for me? I literally have no clue what it is and I debugged soo much already. It would be heavily gracious and appreciated.
Kind regards,
Bluppie05
There's a few problems with this code that would be preventing you from getting the correct output.
The main reason you don't get any output from the if test is the condition is (presumably) using the wrong variable name.
// variable with the file data is called $email
$email = file_get_contents("$dirname/email.txt");
// test is checking $stremail which is never given a value
if ($stremail == $query) {
echo($dirname);
}
There is also an issue with your scandir() and unset() combination. As you've discovered scandir() basically gives you everything that a dir or ls would on the command line. Using unset() to remove specific files is problematic because you have to maintain a hardcoded list of files. However, unset() also leaves holes in your array, the count changes but the original indices do not. This may be why you are using $folderamount + 10 in your loop. Take a look at this Stack Overflow question for more discussion of the problem.
Rebase array keys after unsetting elements
I recommend you read the PHP manual page on the glob() function as it will greatly simplify getting the contents of a directory. In particular take a look at the GLOB_ONLYDIR flag.
https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.glob.php
Lastly, don't increment your loop counter at the beginning of the loop when using the counter to read elements from an array. Take a look at the PHP manual page for foreach loops for a neater way to iterate over an array.
https://www.php.net/manual/en/control-structures.foreach.php
I am successfully able to get random images from my 'uploads' directory with my code but the issue is that it has multiple images repeat. I will reload the page and the same image will show 2 - 15 times without changing. I thought about setting a cookie for the previous image but the execution of how to do this is frying my brain. I'll post what I have here, any help would be great.
$files = glob($dir . '/*.*');
$file = array_rand($files);
$filename = $files[$file];
$search = array_search($_COOKIE['prev'], $files);
if ($_COOKIE['prev'] == $filename) {
unset($files[$search]);
$filename = $files[$file];
setcookie('prev', $filename);
}
Similar to slicks answer, but a little more simple on the session front:
Instead of using array_rand to randomise the array, you can use a custom process that reorders based on just a rand:
$files = array_values(glob($dir . '/*.*'));
$randomFiles = array();
while(count($files) > 0) {
$randomIndex = rand(0, count($files) - 1);
$randomFiles[] = $files[$randomIndex];
unset($files[$randomIndex]);
$files = array_values($files);
}
This is useful because you can seed the rand function, meaning it will always generate the same random numbers. Just add (before you randomise the array):
if($_COOKIE['key']) {
$microtime = $_COOKIE['key'];
else {
$microtime = microtime();
setcookie('key', $microtime);
}
srand($microtime);
This does means that someone can manipulate the order of the images by manipulating the cookie, but if you're okay with that this this should work.
So you want to have no repeats per request? Use session. Best way to avoid repetitions is to have two arrays (buckets). First one will contains all available elements that your will pick from. The second array will be empty for now.
Then start picking items from first array and move them from 1st array to the second. (Remove and array_push to the second). Do this in a loop. On the next iteration first array won't have the element you picked already so you will avoid duplicates.
In general. Move items from a bucket to a bucket and you're done. Additionally you can store your results in session instead of cookies? Server side storage is better for that kind of things.
I have the right PHP scripting to create a random number and make a new folder on the server with that # as it's name. If the folder exists the script stops. What I can't figure out though is how to direct the script to generate a new random # if the folder already exists and try again until it finds a unused number/folder. I think a do while is what I'm looking for but not sure if I have written it correctly or not (Don't want to test it on the server for fear of creating a forever looping mkdir command).
Here is the one off code being used
<?php
$clientid = rand(1,5);
while (!file_exists("clients/$clientid"))
{
mkdir("clients/$clientid", 0755, true);
exit("Your new business ID is($clientid)");
}
echo ("The client id is $clientid");
?>
Here is the do while I am contemplating - is this correct or do I need to do this a different way?
<?php
$clientid = rand(1,5);
do {mkdir("clients/$clientid", 0755, true);
exit("Your new business ID is($clientid)");}
while (!file_exists("clients/$clientid"));
echo ("The client id is $clientid");
?>
The problem is that you only generate a new number once, outside the loop. This means that you end up with a loop that never terminates. Invert the loop and and generate a new number each iteration:
$clientid = rand(1,5);
while (file_exists("clients/$clientid"))
{
// While we are in here, the file exists. Generate a new number and try again.
$clientid = rand(1,5);
}
// We are now guaranteed that we have a unique filename.
mkdir("clients/$clientid", 0755, true);
exit("Your new business ID is($clientid)");
I would do something like this:
<?php
$filename = md5(time().rand()) . ".txt";
while(is_file("clients/$filename")){
$filename = md5(time().rand()) . ".txt";
}
touch("clients/$filename");
useful tip for when your testing code on a while loop; create variable as a safety count and increment it then if your other logic causes an infinite problem it breaks out, like this:
$safetyCount = 0;
while (yourLogic && $safeCount < 500){
//more of your logic
$safetyCount++;
}
obviously if you need 500 lower / higher then set it to whatever, this just makes sure you'll not kill your machine. :)
in php we can check if file exist using
if(file_exists("destination/"))
{
condition
}
but what I wanted to do is...
for example I already have this file on my destination
hello_this_is_filename(2).doc
how would I know if there is a file in that directory having a name containing a character
hello_this_is_filename
I wanted to search that way because... if there is exists on that directory, what will I do is... renaming the file into
hello_this_is_filename(3).doc
I also need to count the existence of my search so I know what number I'm going to put like
(3), (4), (5) and so on
any help?
Use glob.
if (count(glob("destination/hello_this_is_filename*.doc"))) {
//...
}
Leveraging Marc B's suggestion and xdazz, I would do something as follows:
<?php
$files = glob("destination/hello_this_is_filename*");
if (count($files)) {
sort($files);
// last one contains the name we need to get the number of
preg_match("([\d+])", end($files), $matches);
$value = 0;
if (count($matches)) {
// increment by one
$value = $matches[0];
}
$newfilename = "destination/hello_this_is_filename (" . ++$value . ").doc";
?>
Sorry this is untested, but thought it provides others with the regexp work to actually do the incrementing...
I have a directory containing sub directories which each contain a series of files. I'm looking for a script that will look inside the sub directories and randomly return a specified number of files.
There are a few scripts that can search a single directories (not sub folders), and other scripts that can search sub folders but only return one file.
To put a little context on the situation, the returned files will be included as li's in an rotating banner.
Thanks in advance for any help, hopefully this is possible.
I think I've got there, not exactly what I set out to achieve but works good enough, arguably better for the purpose, I'm using the following function:
<?php function RandomFile($folder='', $extensions='.*'){
// fix path:
$folder = trim($folder);
$folder = ($folder == '') ? './' : $folder;
// check folder:
if (!is_dir($folder)){ die('invalid folder given!'); }
// create files array
$files = array();
// open directory
if ($dir = #opendir($folder)){
// go trough all files:
while($file = readdir($dir)){
if (!preg_match('/^\.+$/', $file) and
preg_match('/\.('.$extensions.')$/', $file)){
// feed the array:
$files[] = $file;
}
}
// close directory
closedir($dir);
}
else {
die('Could not open the folder "'.$folder.'"');
}
if (count($files) == 0){
die('No files where found :-(');
}
// seed random function:
mt_srand((double)microtime()*1000000);
// get an random index:
$rand = mt_rand(0, count($files)-1);
// check again:
if (!isset($files[$rand])){
die('Array index was not found! very strange!');
}
// return the random file:
return $folder . "/" . $files[$rand];
}
$random1 = RandomFile('project-banners/website-design');
while (!$random2 || $random2 == $random1) {
$random2 = RandomFile('project-banners/logo-design');
}
while (!$random3 || $random3 == $random1 || $random3 == $random2) {
$random3 = RandomFile('project-banners/design-for-print');
}
?>
And echoing the results into the container (in this case the ul):
<?php include($random1) ;?>
<?php include($random2) ;?>
<?php include($random3) ;?>
Thanks to quickshiftin for his help, however it was a little above my skill level.
For info the original script which I changed an be found at:
http://randaclay.com/tips-tools/multiple-random-image-php-script/
Scrubbing the filesystem every single time to randomly select a file to display will be really slow. You should index the directory structure ahead of time. You can do this many ways, try a simple find command or if you really want to use PHP my favorite choice would be RecursiveDirectoryIterator plus RecursiveIteratorIterator.
Put all the results into one file and just read from there when you select a file to display. You can use the line numbers as an index, and the rand function to pick a line and thus a file to display. You might want to consider something more evenly distributed than rand though, you know to keep the advertisers happy :)
EDIT:
Adding a simple real-world example:
// define the location of the portfolio directory
define('PORTFOLIO_ROOT', '/Users/quickshiftin/junk-php');
// and a place where we'll store the index
define('FILE_INDEX', '/tmp/porfolio-map.txt');
// if the index doesn't exist, build it
// (this doesn't take into account changes to the portfolio files)
if(!file_exists(FILE_INDEX))
shell_exec('find ' . PORTFOLIO_ROOT . ' > ' . FILE_INDEX);
// read the index into memory (very slow but easy way to do this)
$aIndex = file(FILE_INDEX);
// randomly select an index
$iIndex = rand(0, count($aIndex) - 1);
// spit out the filename
var_dump(trim($aIndex[$iIndex]));