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サポートするプロトコル/ラッパー

PHP には多くの組み込みラッパーが用意されています。さまざまな URL 風のプロトコルによって、 fopen()copy()file_exists() そして filesize() といったファイルシステム関数で使用することができます。 これらのラッパーだけでなく、 stream_wrapper_register() 関数でラッパーを自作することもできます。

注意: ラッパーを指定する際の URL 構文としてサポートしているのは scheme://... 形式のみです。 scheme:/scheme: といった形式には対応していません。

目次

  • file:// — ローカルファイルシステムへのアクセス
  • http:// — HTTP(s) URL へのアクセス
  • ftp:// — FTP(s) URL へのアクセス
  • php:// — さまざまな入出力ストリームへのアクセス
  • zlib:// — 圧縮ストリーム
  • data:// — データ (RFC 2397)
  • glob:// — パターンにマッチするパス名の検索
  • phar:// — PHP アーカイブ
  • ssh2:// — Secure Shell 2
  • rar:// — RAR
  • ogg:// — オーディオストリーム
  • expect:// — 対話的プロセスストリーム
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User Contributed Notes 31 notes

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15
Hayley Watson
5 years ago
Even though their names will be the same, you can have more than one //memory or //temp stream open concurrently; each time you fopen() such a stream, a NEW stream will be opened independently of the others.

This is hinted at by the fact you don't add any unique identifier to the path when creating such streams, but isn't said explicitly.

<?php

$hello
= fopen('php://memory', 'r+'); // $hello, $php, $world are all different streams.
$php  = fopen('php://memory', 'r+');
$world = fopen('php://memory', 'r+'); // They're not the same stream opened three times.

fputs($hello, "Hello ");
fputs($php, "PHP ");
rewind($php);
fputs($world, "World!");
rewind($hello);
rewind($world);

echo
'[', stream_get_contents($hello), '][', stream_get_contents($php), '][', stream_get_contents($world), ']';
// If they were the same stream the output would be "[World!][World!][World!]".
?>
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14
fabacrans__ at __nospamhotmail__ dot __com
10 years ago
You can use "php://input" to accept and parse "PUT", "DELETE", etc. requests.

<?php
// Example to parse "PUT" requests
parse_str(file_get_contents('php://input'), $_PUT);

// The result
print_r($_PUT);
?>

(very useful for Restful API)
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13
sander at medicore dot nl
15 years ago
to create a raw tcp listener system i use the following:

xinetd daemon with config like:
service test
{
        disable      = no
        type         = UNLISTED
        socket_type  = stream
        protocol     = tcp
        bind         = 127.0.0.1
        port         = 12345
        wait         = no
        user         = apache
        group        = apache
        instances    = 10
        server       = /usr/local/bin/php
        server_args  = -n [your php file here]
        only_from    = 127.0.0.1 #gotta love the security#
        log_type     = FILE /var/log/phperrors.log
        log_on_success += DURATION
}

now use fgets(STDIN) to read the input. Creates connections pretty quick, works like a charm.Writing can be done using the STDOUT, or just echo. Be aware that you're completely bypassing the webserver and thus certain variables will not be available.
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10
heitorsiller at uol dot com dot br
16 years ago
For reading a XML stream, this will work just fine:
<?php

$arq
= file_get_contents('php://input');

?>

Then you can parse the XML like this:

<?php

$xml
= xml_parser_create();

xml_parse_into_struct($xml, $arq, $vs);

xml_parser_free($xml);

$data = "";

foreach(
$vs as $v){

        if(
$v['level'] == 3 && $v['type'] == 'complete')
               
$data .= "\n".$v['tag']." -> ".$v['value'];
}

echo
$data;

?>

PS.: This is particularly useful for receiving mobile originated (MO) SMS messages from cellular phone companies.
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8
php at rapsys dot eu
10 years ago
Here is a snippet to read compressed raw post data without enabling global variables.

I needed it to read xml posted data submitted by ocs agent. The data was sent as Content-Type: application/x-compressed (zlib compressed data).

It seems related to an old bug which still seems broken :
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=49411

The important part is the default window set to 15 instead of -15.

Code snippet
<?php
$data
= '';
$fh = fopen('php://input', 'rb');
stream_filter_append($fh, 'zlib.inflate', STREAM_FILTER_READ, array('window'=>15));
while(!
feof($fh)) {
   
$data .= fread($fh, 8192);
}
?>
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7
sebastian dot krebs at kingcrunch dot de
12 years ago
The stream php://temp/maxmemory:$limit stores the data in memory unless the limit is reached. Then it will write the whole content the a temporary file and frees the memory. I didnt found a way to get at least some of the data back to memory.
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8
ben dot johansen at gmail dot com
16 years ago
Example of how to use the php://input to get raw post data

//read the raw data in
$roughHTTPPOST = file_get_contents("php://input");
//parse it into vars
parse_str($roughHTTPPOST);

if you do readfile("php://input") you will get the length of the post data
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7
aidan at php dot net
18 years ago
The contants:

* STDIN
* STDOUT
* STDERR

Were introduced in PHP 4.3.0 and are synomous with the fopen('php://stdx') result resource.
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7
Anonymous
5 years ago
If you want to filter incoming data through php://input use this:

file_get_contents("php://filter/read=string.strip_tags/resource=php://input");

I couldn't find any documentation to explain how to do this. All the examples I came across suggested that a full and actual URL had to be used (which didn't work for me).

This seems to work though.
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7
ben dot johansen at gmail dot com
16 years ago
In trying to do AJAX with PHP and Javascript, I came upon an issue where the POST argument from the following javascript could not be read in via PHP 5 using the $_REQUEST or $_POST. I finally figured out how to read in the raw data using the php://input directive.
   
Javascript code:
=============
      //create request instance     
      xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
      // set the event handler
      xhttp.onreadystatechange = serviceReturn;
      // prep the call, http method=POST, true=asynchronous call
      var Args = 'number='+NbrValue;
      xhttp.open("POST", "http://<?php echo $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'] ?>/webservices/ws_service.php", true);
      // send the call with args
      xhttp.send(Args);

PHP Code:
    //read the raw data in
    $roughHTTPPOST = file_get_contents("php://input");
    //parse it into vars
    parse_str($roughHTTPPOST);
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7
sam at bigwig dot net
19 years ago
[ Editor's Note: There is a way to know.  All response headers (from both the final responding server and intermediate redirecters) can be found in $http_response_header or stream_get_meta_data() as described above. ]

If you open an HTTP url and the server issues a Location style redirect, the redirected contents will be read but you can't find out that this has happened.

So if you then parse the returned html and try and rationalise relative URLs you could get it wrong.
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7
gjaman at gmail dot com
14 years ago
You can decompress (gzip) a input stream by combining wrappers:

eg:  $x = file_get_contents("compress.zlib://php://input");

I used this method to decompress a gzip stream that was pushed to my webserver
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4
ben dot johansen at gmail dot com
16 years ago
followup:

I found that if I added this line to the AJAX call, the values would show up in the $_POST

xhttp.setRequestHeader('Content-Type',
'application/x-www-form-urlencoded');
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3
vibhavsinha91 at gmail dot com
8 years ago
While writing to error stream, error_log() function comes as a shorthand to writing to php://stderr . This function also allows writing to web server log when running through a web server such as apache.
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4
nargy at yahoo dot com
18 years ago
When opening php://output in append mode you get an error, the way to do it:
$fp=fopen("php://output","w");
fwrite($fp,"Hello, world !<BR>\n");
fclose($fp);
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3
Justin Megawarne
9 years ago
If my understanding of the implementing code is correct, every time you open a php://memory stream, you get new storage allocated. That is to say, php://memory isn't a shared bank of memory.
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3
leonid at shagabutdinov dot com
11 years ago
For https for windows enable this extension:

extension=php_openssl.dll
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1
Anonymous
5 years ago
Be forewarned:

the file:// protocol used in file_get_contents is used as the default for "any unrecognized protocol." Thus:

aldfjadlfadfladfl://whatever

will deliver the same as

file://whatever
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2
aaron dot mason+php at thats-too-much dot info
10 years ago
Be aware of code injection, folks - like anything else you take from the user, SANITISE IT FIRST.  This cannot be stressed enough - if I had a dollar for each time I saw code where form input was taken and directly used (by myself as well, I've been stupid too) I'd probably own PHP.  While using data from a form in a URL wrapper is asking for trouble, you can greatly minimise the trouble by making sure your inputs are sane and not likely to provide an opening for the LulzSec of the world to cause havoc.
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2
jerry at gii dot co dot jp
15 years ago
Not only are STDIN, STDOUT, and STDERR only allowed for CLI programs, but they are not allowed for programs that are read from STDIN. That can confuse you if you try to type in a simple test program.
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2
nyvsld at gmail dot com
17 years ago
php://stdin supports fseek() and fstat() function call,
while php://input doesn't.
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1
oliver at codeinline dot com
9 years ago
A useful way to handle large file uploads is to do something like:

copy(("php://input"),$tmpfile);

as this avoids using lots of memory just to buffer the file content.

The correct mime type for this should be "application/octet-stream" however if you set this or any other recognised mime type other than "multipart/form-data" on your POST then $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA is populated and the memory is consumed anyway.

Setting the mime type to "multipart/form-data" raises “PHP Warning:  Missing boundary in multipart/form-data POST data in Unknown on line 0” however it seems to work without a problem.
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1
Anonymous
10 years ago
For php://filter the /resource=foo part must come last. And foo needs no escaping at all.
php://filter/resource=foo/read=somefilter would try to open a file 'foo/read=somefilter' while php://filter/read=somefilter/resource=foo will open file 'foo' with the somefilter filter applied.
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1
lupti at yahoo dot com
19 years ago
I find using file_get_contents with php://input is very handy and efficient. Here is the code:

$request = "";
$request = file_get_contents("php://input");

I don't need to declare the URL filr string as "r". It automatically handles open the file with read.

I can then use this $request string to your XMLparser as data.
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0
kazdotkanso at geeemail dot com
2 years ago
The php://fd/ wrapper is only supported in the cli tool.
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0
chris at free-source dot com
17 years ago
If you're looking for a unix based smb wrapper there isn't one built in,  but I've had luck with http://www.zevils.com/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/libsmbclient-php/ (tarball link at the end).