PHP Conference Nagoya 2025

Filter Funzioni

Indice dei contenuti

  • filter_has_var — Checks if variable of specified type exists
  • filter_id — Returns the filter ID belonging to a named filter
  • filter_input — Gets a specific external variable by name and optionally filters it
  • filter_input_array — Gets external variables and optionally filters them
  • filter_list — Returns a list of all supported filters
  • filter_var — Filters a variable with a specified filter
  • filter_var_array — Gets multiple variables and optionally filters them
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User Contributed Notes 2 notes

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4
vojtech at x dot cz
17 years ago
Also notice that filter functions are using only the original variable values passed to the script even if you change the value in super global variable ($_GET, $_POST, ...) later in the script.

<?php
echo filter_input(INPUT_GET, 'var'); // print 'something'
echo $_GET['var']; // print 'something'
$_GET['var'] = 'changed';
echo
filter_input(INPUT_GET, 'var'); // print 'something'
echo $_GET['var']; // print 'changed'
?>

In fact, external data are duplicated in SAPI before the script is processed and filter functions don't use super globals anymore (as explained in Filter tutorial bellow, section 'How does it work?').
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0
fumble1 at web dot de
17 years ago
I recommend you to use the FILTER_REQUIRE_SCALAR (or FILTER_REQUIRE_ARRAY) flags, since you can use array-brackets both to access string offsets and array-element -- however, not only this can lead to unexpected behaviour. Look at this example:

<?php
$image
= basename(filter_input(INPUT_GET, 'src', FILTER_UNSAFE_RAW, FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_LOW));
// further checks
?>

/script.php?src[0]=foobar will cause a warning. :-(
Hence my recommendation:

<?php
$image
= basename(filter_input(INPUT_GET, 'src', FILTER_UNSAFE_RAW, FILTER_REQUIRE_SCALAR | FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_LOW));
// further checks
?>
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