Is there a function where I'm not constrained to open a file to write in it and then to close it up. I'm searching for one function looking like this
bool thefunction(string line, string path, string mode);
line is what I want to write in the file located from path and either from the end of the document or at the start erasing all the content defined with mode argument.
Ok this sounds a bit picky, but it's the idea. I want to make a count up and need a file to increment the value in it.
Look into file_put_contents(). You'll still need to chmod() the file if you require different permissions than file_put_contents() creates.
Example:
// This writes a line to a file, appending to what's already there
$success = file_put_contents("/path/to/file.txt", "This string goes into the file\n", FILE_APPEND);
Related
What is the best way to overwrite a specific line in a file? I basically want to search a file for the string '#parsethis' and overwrite the rest of that line with something else.
If the file is really big (log files or something like this) and you are willing to sacrifice speed for memory consumption you could open two files and essentially do the trick Jeremy Ruten proposed by using files instead of system memory.
$source='in.txt';
$target='out.txt';
// copy operation
$sh=fopen($source, 'r');
$th=fopen($target, 'w');
while (!feof($sh)) {
$line=fgets($sh);
if (strpos($line, '#parsethis')!==false) {
$line='new line to be inserted' . PHP_EOL;
}
fwrite($th, $line);
}
fclose($sh);
fclose($th);
// delete old source file
unlink($source);
// rename target file to source file
rename($target, $source);
If the file isn't too big, the best way would probably be to read the file into an array of lines with file(), search through the array of lines for your string and edit that line, then implode() the array back together and fwrite() it back to the file.
Your main problem is the fact that the new line may not be the same length as the old line. If you need to change the length of the line, there is no way out of rewriting at least all of the file after the changed line. The easiest way is to create a new, modified file and then move it over the original. This way there is a complete file available at all times for readers. Use locking to make sure that only one script is modifying the file at once, and since you are going to replace the file, do the locking on a different file. Check out flock().
If you are certain that the new line will be the same length as the old line, you can open the file in read/write mode (use r+ as the second argument to fopen()) and call ftell() to save the position the line starts at each time before you call fgets() to read a line. Once you find the line that you want to overwrite, you can use fseek() to go back to the beginning of the line and fwrite() the new data. One way to force the line to always be the same length is to space pad it out to the maximum possible length.
This is a solution that works for rewriting only one line of a file in place with sed from PHP. My file contains only style vars and is formatted:
$styleVarName: styleVarProperty;\n
For this I first add the ":" to the ends of myStyleVarName, and sed replaces the rest of that line with the new property and adds a semicolon.
Make sure characters are properly escaped in myStyleVarProp.
$command = "pathToShellScript folder1Name folder2Name myStyleVarName myStyleVarProp";
shell_exec($command);
/* shellScript */
#!/bin/bash
file=/var/www/vhosts/mydomain.com/$1/$2/scss/_variables.scss
str=$3"$4"
sed -i "s/^$3.*/$str;/" $file
or if your file isn't too big:
$sample = file_get_contents('sample');
$parsed =preg_replace('##parsethis.*#', 'REPLACE TO END OF LINE', $sample);
You'll have to choose delimiters '#' that aren't present in the file though.
If you want to completely replace the contents of one file with the contents of another file you can use this:
rename("./some_path/data.txt", "./some_path/data_backup.txt");
rename("./some_path/new_data.txt", "./some_path/data.txt");
So in the first line you backup the file and in the second line you replace the file with the contents of a new file.
As far as I can tell the rename returns a boolean. True if the rename is successful and false if it fails. One could, therefore, only run the second step if the first step is successful to prevent overwriting the file unless a backup has been made successfully. Check out:
https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.rename.php
Hope that is useful to someone.
Cheers
Adrian
I'd most likely do what Jeremy suggested, but just for an alternate way to do it here is another solution. This has not been tested or used and is for *nix systems.
$cmd = "grep '#parsethis' " . $filename;
$output = system($cmd, $result);
$lines = explode("\n", $result);
// Read the entire file as a string
// Do a str_repalce for each item in $lines with ""
I want to wite to a text file at the inputed text position using PHP. I tried using fseek to point the wite position to the inputed number, but it saves as an empty file instead.
<?php
$testData = "testdata";
$testPosition = 3;
$fileReference = fopen("test.txt", "w");
fseek($fileReference, $testPosition);
fwrite($fileReference, $testData);
fclose($fileReference);
?>
How would I get the script to wite to the text file at the specified position correctly?
The w flag only allows for writing to a file. Try replacing the w flag with a r+ flag. This will allow for read/write to a file without truncating the file. the read /write is needed to allows you to go search for your caret and write to where it is. for more information on the fopen function please see php.net: fopen()
The w flag has this functionality:
'w' Open for writing only; place the file pointer at the beginning of the file and truncate the file to zero length. If the file does not exist, attempt to create it.
This could be why you're getting an empty file.
However, on my local server, this works fine. This makes me think your permissions may not be correct. For example, you might not have write permissions. Try and ensure that you have the correct permissions on this file.
I have a .txt file that includes a list of about 500 file names. I need to generate the actual files based on the list. I could use either CMD locally, or PHP. Which ever is best. Each file name is on a separate line within the .txt and there is no other punctuation or syntax. Let's say, for example, the .txt file is named colors.txt: and EACH LINE inside the text file contains a unique file name, like this:
red.php
blue.php
green.php
orange.php
yellow.php
magenta.php
light-yellow.php
purple.php
How would I go about actually turning these names in the list into files? And, better yet, is there a way to include content into the files as they are generated? For example, if I wanted to insert <?echo "hello world";?> automatically within each and every new .php file as it was being created, how could I? Thanks
NOTE: This is a batch-script for windows.
To create these files from your colors.txt list and add the echo line to each file, use the following FOR /F loop:
FOR /F "tokens=*" %%A IN (colors.txt) DO (
(ECHO ^<?echo "hello world";?^>)>"%%A"
)
Notice in the ECHO command you must escape the < and > characters with ^ to make them into a literal string or else the batch script will think they are redirection commands.
I'm not exactly sure what you're trying to do here. My gut tells me there may be a better way to solve the bigger picture problem you are dealing with. Nonetheless, you could try something like the following:
foreach (file('colors.txt') as $filename) {
file_put_contents($filename, '<?php echo "hello world";');
}
You would probably also want to do some sanity checking on the filenames to make sure they are safe to use.
Sorry for my bad English.
I must to check 2 csv files, if strings with one id is different, must write to file.
If there is no string with id from 1st file in second file, must write this to file too.
it works, but with element (id=47) i have got a trouble. it into to files, but script sad, that there is only in one.
download script you can from here
http://sil-design.ru/uploads/script.zip
If you do a echo $str1[0].' - '.$str2[0].'<br />'; you will see that the two 47's are never compared. Also I am not sure what the t is in: $f2 = fopen($fileurl, 'rt');.
If you open your backup.csv in notepad and place your cursor after the 47;XL and hold delete to delete anything after it and save. Then try your script again, it should work. It seems that the backup.csv was created in a weird way, I am guessing PHP is getting an EOF before the file has even ended!
What is the best way to overwrite a specific line in a file? I basically want to search a file for the string '#parsethis' and overwrite the rest of that line with something else.
If the file is really big (log files or something like this) and you are willing to sacrifice speed for memory consumption you could open two files and essentially do the trick Jeremy Ruten proposed by using files instead of system memory.
$source='in.txt';
$target='out.txt';
// copy operation
$sh=fopen($source, 'r');
$th=fopen($target, 'w');
while (!feof($sh)) {
$line=fgets($sh);
if (strpos($line, '#parsethis')!==false) {
$line='new line to be inserted' . PHP_EOL;
}
fwrite($th, $line);
}
fclose($sh);
fclose($th);
// delete old source file
unlink($source);
// rename target file to source file
rename($target, $source);
If the file isn't too big, the best way would probably be to read the file into an array of lines with file(), search through the array of lines for your string and edit that line, then implode() the array back together and fwrite() it back to the file.
Your main problem is the fact that the new line may not be the same length as the old line. If you need to change the length of the line, there is no way out of rewriting at least all of the file after the changed line. The easiest way is to create a new, modified file and then move it over the original. This way there is a complete file available at all times for readers. Use locking to make sure that only one script is modifying the file at once, and since you are going to replace the file, do the locking on a different file. Check out flock().
If you are certain that the new line will be the same length as the old line, you can open the file in read/write mode (use r+ as the second argument to fopen()) and call ftell() to save the position the line starts at each time before you call fgets() to read a line. Once you find the line that you want to overwrite, you can use fseek() to go back to the beginning of the line and fwrite() the new data. One way to force the line to always be the same length is to space pad it out to the maximum possible length.
This is a solution that works for rewriting only one line of a file in place with sed from PHP. My file contains only style vars and is formatted:
$styleVarName: styleVarProperty;\n
For this I first add the ":" to the ends of myStyleVarName, and sed replaces the rest of that line with the new property and adds a semicolon.
Make sure characters are properly escaped in myStyleVarProp.
$command = "pathToShellScript folder1Name folder2Name myStyleVarName myStyleVarProp";
shell_exec($command);
/* shellScript */
#!/bin/bash
file=/var/www/vhosts/mydomain.com/$1/$2/scss/_variables.scss
str=$3"$4"
sed -i "s/^$3.*/$str;/" $file
or if your file isn't too big:
$sample = file_get_contents('sample');
$parsed =preg_replace('##parsethis.*#', 'REPLACE TO END OF LINE', $sample);
You'll have to choose delimiters '#' that aren't present in the file though.
If you want to completely replace the contents of one file with the contents of another file you can use this:
rename("./some_path/data.txt", "./some_path/data_backup.txt");
rename("./some_path/new_data.txt", "./some_path/data.txt");
So in the first line you backup the file and in the second line you replace the file with the contents of a new file.
As far as I can tell the rename returns a boolean. True if the rename is successful and false if it fails. One could, therefore, only run the second step if the first step is successful to prevent overwriting the file unless a backup has been made successfully. Check out:
https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.rename.php
Hope that is useful to someone.
Cheers
Adrian
I'd most likely do what Jeremy suggested, but just for an alternate way to do it here is another solution. This has not been tested or used and is for *nix systems.
$cmd = "grep '#parsethis' " . $filename;
$output = system($cmd, $result);
$lines = explode("\n", $result);
// Read the entire file as a string
// Do a str_repalce for each item in $lines with ""