I have a text file called things.txt with:
thing1
thing2
thing34
and php:
$fp = fopen('things.txt');
while (!feof($fp)) {
$line = fgets($fp);
echo $line."<br>";
}
fclose($fp);
and it's not working...any ideas?
fopen() requires at least two parameters!
$fp = fopen('things.txt', 'r');
The second one is the mode. r ("readonly, pointer at the beginning, no truncate") should work fine here, because you only read it. For the other modes, refer the manual (linked above).
You should change your development settings to
error_reporting = E_ALL | E_STRICT
because you should get an error for this. However, the reason for the infinite loop is, that fopen() returns null and feof(null) returns false and while(!false) is an infinite loop.
When using fopen, you need to specify a mode (reading, writing, etc). So you should change your code to:
$fp = fopen('things.txt', 'r');
while (!feof($fp)) {
$line = fgets($fp);
echo $line."<br>";
}
fclose($fp);
try $fp = fopen('things.txt', 'r') or die('unable to open file'); to see if your script can actually find your file
Related
I've been following PHP and MySQL Web Development 5th edition, but I'm stuck on Chapter 2 because I cannot write to a file.
Here's the code:
// open file for appending
$fp = fopen('orders.txt', 'ab', true);
if (!$fp) {
echo "<p><strong> Your order could not be processed at this time.
Please try again later.</strong></p>";
exit;
}
flock($fp, LOCK_EX);
$bytes = fwrite($fp, $outputstring, strlen($outputstring));
echo $bytes;
flock($fp, LOCK_UN);
fclose($fp);
The echo gives me 65, which seems right, but orders.txt is always completely blank. Could someone give me some advice? I'm using Webstorm with a server hosted on GoDaddy if that matters.
Perhaps you meant
$fp = fopen('orders.txt', 'a', true);
instead of
$fp = fopen('orders.txt', 'ab', true);
Note that you can also use the 'w' mode instead of 'a' if you would like to overwrite the file instead of appending at the end of it.
When I run this function on multiple scripts one script generated warning:
fread(): Length parameter must be greater than 0
function test($n){
echo "<h4>$n at ".time()."</h4>";
for ($i = 0; $i<50; $i++ ){
$fp = fopen("$n.txt", "r");
$s = fread($fp, filesize("$n.txt") );
fclose($fp);
$fp = fopen("$n.txt", "w");
$s = $_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT'].' '.time();
if (flock($fp, LOCK_EX)) { // acquire an exclusive lock
fwrite($fp, $s);
// fflush($fp);// flush output before releasing the lock
flock($fp, LOCK_UN); // release the lock
} else {
echo "Couldn't get the lock!";
}
}
}
I try to write reading of the file for multiple users, but only one user can write the file. I know that when I use fwrite with flock - LOC_EX, next scripts must wait till the write is finished. But here it seems like filesize doesn't wait till the write operation is finished. My opinion is that it tries to reach the file when the file size is 0, and as a result this produces the problem: 0 bytes will be read from the file, when it is written by original script.
Is it possible to fix this for fread function?
Purpose of this script is to test fread with some limit and to check the data which I read later, if the data are really written when I did not used fflush.
function test($n){
echo "<h4>$n at ".time()."</h4>";
for ($i = 0; $i<50; $i++ ){
$start = microtime(true);
$fp = fopen("$n.txt", "r");
if(filesize($n.txt) > 0)
{
$s = fread($fp, filesize($n.txt) );
fclose($fp);
$fp = fopen("$n.txt", "w");
$s = $_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT'].' '.time();
if (flock($fp, LOCK_EX)) { // acquire an exclusive lock
fwrite($fp, $s);
// fflush($fp);// flush output before releasing the lock
flock($fp, LOCK_UN); // release the lock
} else {
echo "Couldn't get the lock!";
}
}
else
{
echo "Filesize must be greater than 0";
}
}
}
please change $s variables name its use same things two time
$fp = fopen("$n.txt", "r");
$s = fread($fp, filesize("$n.txt") );
fclose($fp);
The error occurs in the middle line of the above three lines.
Firstly, these three lines could be rewritten into a single line as follows:
$s = file_get_contents("$n.txt");
However, these isn't necessary, as these three lines are entirely redundant in your code. They don't do anything useful.
What they do is open a file, store its contents to $s and then close it.
But you are then immediately setting $s to a different value, thus throwing away the previous value, and making it pointless to have read it from the file in the first place.
If you need to keep the original contents of the file, then use file_get_contents() and make sure you don't overwrite the contents of the variable.
If you don't need the original contents of the file, then just delete those three lines from your code.
Incidentally, this error highlights a couple of good coding practices that you should take on board: Firstly, never re-use a variable for two different things, and secondly always give your variables (and functions) good names. $s is not a good name; $previousFileContents would be a better name; it would have made the error much more obvious.
I'm trying to create a text file-based sequential url rotator by using the following code (original source):
<?php
$linksfile ="urlrotator.txt";
$posfile = "pos.txt";
$links = file($linksfile);
$numlinks = count($linksfile);
$fp = fopen($posfile, 'r+') or die("Failed to open posfile");
flock($fp, LOCK_EX);
$num = fread($fp, 1024);
if($num<$numlinks-1) {
fwrite($fp, $num+1);
} else {
fwrite($fp, 0);
}
flock($fp, LOCK_UN);
fclose($fp);
header("Location: {$links[$num]}");
?>
After my testing, I found that it keeps appending new position number as a string after the existing content of pos.txt and thus the script only works at the first time.
I tried adding the following line of code before the if else statement in order to clear the existing content of pos.txt before updating it.
file_put_contents($posfile, "");
But then error ocurred at the line of redirection saying Undefined index: ...... .
Where could possibly go wrong?
I believe your problem comes from the mode you are using. When you say
After my testing, I found that it keeps appending new position number as a string after the existing content of pos.txt and thus the script only works at the first time.
it points me to the mode usage of fopen.
The mode you should use is w, as it will "replace" the content of what is inside pos.txt.
$fp = fopen($posfile, 'w') or die("Failed to open posfile");
Doing so will prevent your from accessing what was in pos.txt. So you need to have something like this:
$num = file_get_contents($posfile);
$fp = fopen($posfile, 'w') or die("Failed to open posfile");
flock($fp, LOCK_EX);
if($num<$numlinks-1) {
fwrite($fp, $num+1);
} else {
fwrite($fp, 0);
}
flock($fp, LOCK_UN);
fclose($fp);
As I start the process of writing my site in PHP and MySQL, one of the first PHP scripts I've written is a script to initialize my database. Drop/create the database. Drop/create each of the tables. Then load the tables from literals in the script.
That's all working fine! Whoohoo :-)
But I would prefer to read the data from files rather than hard-code them in the PHP script.
I have a couple of books on PHP, but they're all oriented toward web development using MySQL. I can't find anything about reading and writing to ordinary files.
Yes, I know there's a gazillion questions here on stackoverflow about reading TXT files, but when I look at each one, they're for C or C# or VB or Perl. I'm beginning to think that PHP just can't read files :-(
All I need is a brief PHP example of how to open a TXT file on the server, read it sequentially, display the data on the screen, and close the file, as in this pseudo-code:
program readfile;
handle = open('myfile.txt');
data = read (handle);
while (not eof (handle)) begin
display data;
data = read (handle);
end;
close (handle);
end;
I will also need to write files on the server when I get to the part of my site where people upload avatars, and save them as JPG or GIF files. But that's for later.
Thanks!
From the PHP manual for fread():
<?php
// get contents of a file into a string
$filename = "/usr/local/something.txt";
$handle = fopen($filename, "r");
$contents = fread($handle, filesize($filename));
fclose($handle);
?>
EDIT
per the comment, you can read a file line by line with fgets()
<?php
$handle = #fopen("/tmp/inputfile.txt", "r");
if ($handle) {
while (($buffer = fgets($handle, 4096)) !== false) {
echo $buffer;
}
if (!feof($handle)) {
echo "Error: unexpected fgets() fail\n";
}
fclose($handle);
}
?>
All I need is a brief PHP example of how to open a TXT file on the server, read it sequentially, display the data on the screen, and close the file, as in this pseudo-code:
echo file_get_contents('/path/to/file.txt');
Yes that brief, see file_get_contents, you normally don't need a loop:
$file = new SPLFileObject('/path/to/file.txt');
foreach($file as $line) {
echo $line;
}
Well, since you're asking about resources on the subject, there's a whole book on it in the PHP.net docs.
A basic example:
<?php
// get contents of a file into a string
$filename = "/usr/local/something.txt";
$handle = fopen($filename, "r");
$contents = fread($handle, filesize($filename));
fclose($handle);
?>
Why you not read php documentation about fopen
$file = fopen("source/file.txt","r");
if(!file)
{
echo("ERROR:cant open file");
}
else
{
$buff = fread ($file,filesize("source/file.txt"));
print $buff;
}
file_get_contents does all that for you and returns the text file in a string :)
You want to read line by line? Use fgets.
$handle = #fopen("myfile.txt", "r");
if ($handle) {
while (($content = fgets($handle, 4096)) !== false) {
//echo $content;
}
if (!feof($handle)) {
echo "Error: unexpected fgets() fail\n";
}
fclose($handle);
}
I'm trying to read a specific line from a text file using php.
Here's the text file:
foo
foo2
How would I get the content of the second line using php?
This returns the first line:
<?php
$myFile = "4-24-11.txt";
$fh = fopen($myFile, 'r');
$theData = fgets($fh);
fclose($fh);
echo $theData;
?>
..but I need the second.
Any help would be greatly appreciated
$myFile = "4-24-11.txt";
$lines = file($myFile);//file in to an array
echo $lines[1]; //line 2
file — Reads entire file into an array
omg I'm lacking 7 rep to make comments. This is #Raptor's & #Tomm's comment, since this question still shows up way high in google serps.
He's exactly right. For small files file($file); is perfectly fine. For large files it's total overkill b/c php arrays eat memory like crazy.
I just ran a tiny test with a *.csv with a file size of ~67mb (1,000,000 lines):
$t = -microtime(1);
$file = '../data/1000k.csv';
$lines = file($file);
echo $lines[999999]
."\n".(memory_get_peak_usage(1)/1024/1024)
."\n".($t+microtime(1));
//227.5
//0.22701287269592
//Process finished with exit code 0
And since noone mentioned it yet, I gave the SplFileObject a try, which I actually just recently discovered for myself.
$t = -microtime(1);
$file = '../data/1000k.csv';
$spl = new SplFileObject($file);
$spl->seek(999999);
echo $spl->current()
."\n".(memory_get_peak_usage(1)/1024/1024)
."\n".($t+microtime(1));
//0.5
//0.11500692367554
//Process finished with exit code 0
This was on my Win7 desktop so it's not representative for production environment, but still ... quite the difference.
If you wanted to do it that way...
$line = 0;
while (($buffer = fgets($fh)) !== FALSE) {
if ($line == 1) {
// This is the second line.
break;
}
$line++;
}
Alternatively, open it with file() and subscript the line with [1].
I would use the SplFileObject class...
$file = new SplFileObject("filename");
if (!$file->eof()) {
$file->seek($lineNumber);
$contents = $file->current(); // $contents would hold the data from line x
}
you can use the following to get all the lines in the file
$handle = #fopen('test.txt', "r");
if ($handle) {
while (!feof($handle)) {
$lines[] = fgets($handle, 4096);
}
fclose($handle);
}
print_r($lines);
and $lines[1] for your second line
$myFile = "4-21-11.txt";
$fh = fopen($myFile, 'r');
while(!feof($fh))
{
$data[] = fgets($fh);
//Do whatever you want with the data in here
//This feeds the file into an array line by line
}
fclose($fh);
This question is quite old by now, but for anyone dealing with very large files, here is a solution that does not involve reading every preceding line. This was also the only solution that worked in my case for a file with ~160 million lines.
<?php
function rand_line($fileName) {
do{
$fileSize=filesize($fileName);
$fp = fopen($fileName, 'r');
fseek($fp, rand(0, $fileSize));
$data = fread($fp, 4096); // assumes lines are < 4096 characters
fclose($fp);
$a = explode("\n",$data);
}while(count($a)<2);
return $a[1];
}
echo rand_line("file.txt"); // change file name
?>
It works by opening the file without reading anything, then moving the pointer instantly to a random position, reading up to 4096 characters from that point, then grabbing the first complete line from that data.
If you use PHP on Linux, you may try the following to read text for example between 74th and 159th lines:
$text = shell_exec("sed -n '74,159p' path/to/file.log");
This solution is good if your file is large.
You have to loop the file till end of file.
while(!feof($file))
{
echo fgets($file). "<br />";
}
fclose($file);
Use stream_get_line: stream_get_line — Gets line from stream resource up to a given delimiter
Source: http://php.net/manual/en/function.stream-get-line.php
You could try looping until the line you want, not the EOF, and resetting the variable to the line each time (not adding to it). In your case, the 2nd line is the EOF. (A for loop is probably more appropriate in my code below).
This way the entire file is not in the memory; the drawback is it takes time to go through the file up to the point you want.
<?php
$myFile = "4-24-11.txt";
$fh = fopen($myFile, 'r');
$i = 0;
while ($i < 2)
{
$theData = fgets($fh);
$i++
}
fclose($fh);
echo $theData;
?>
I like daggett answer but there is another solution you can get try if your file is not big enough.
$file = __FILE__; // Let's take the current file just as an example.
$start_line = __LINE__ -1; // The same with the line what we look for. Take the line number where $line variable is declared as the start.
$lines_to_display = 5; // The number of lines to display. Displays only the $start_line if set to 1. If $lines_to_display argument is omitted displays all lines starting from the $start_line.
echo implode('', array_slice(file($file), $start_line, lines_to_display));
I searched for a one line solution to read specific line from a file.
Here my solution:
echo file('dayInt.txt')[1]