Note: The results of this function are cached. See clearstatcache() for more details.
That's a pretty big note. Don't forget this one, since it can make your file_exists() behave unexpectedly - probably at production time ;)
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
file_exists — Проверяет существование указанного файла или каталога
filename
Путь к файлу или каталогу.
На платформах Windows, для проверки наличия файлов на сетевых ресурсах, используйте имена, подобные //computername/share/filename или \\computername\share\filename.
Возвращает true
, если файл или каталог, указанный параметром
filename
, существует, иначе возвращает
false
.
Замечание:
Данная функция возвращает
false
для символических ссылок, указывающих на несуществующие файлы.
Замечание:
Проверка происходит с помощью реальных UID/GID, а не эффективных идентификаторов.
Замечание: Поскольку тип integer в PHP — целое число со знаком, а многие платформы используют 32-битные целые числа, отдельные функции файловых систем могут возвращать неожиданные результаты для файлов размером больше 2 ГБ.
В случае неудачного завершения работы генерируется ошибка уровня E_WARNING
.
Пример #1 Проверка существования файла
<?php
$filename = '/path/to/foo.txt';
if (file_exists($filename)) {
echo "Файл $filename существует";
} else {
echo "Файл $filename не существует";
}
?>
Замечание: Результаты функции кешируются. Подробнее о кешировании рассказывает описание функции clearstatcache().
Начиная с PHP 5.0.0, эта функция также может быть использована с некоторыми обёртками url. Список обёрток, поддерживаемых семейством функций stat(), смотрите в разделе Протоколы и обёртки.
Note: The results of this function are cached. See clearstatcache() for more details.
That's a pretty big note. Don't forget this one, since it can make your file_exists() behave unexpectedly - probably at production time ;)
file_exists() does NOT search the php include_path for your file, so don't use it before trying to include or require.
use
@$result = include $filename;
Yes, include does return false when the file can't be found, but it does also generate a warning. That's why you need the @. Don't try to get around the warning issue by using file_exists(). That will leave you scratching your head until you figure out or stumble across the fact that file_exists() DOESN'T SEARCH THE PHP INCLUDE_PATH.
Note that realpath() will return false if the file doesn't exist. So if you're going to absolutize the path and resolve symlinks anyway, you can just check the return value from realpath() instead of calling file_exists() first
I needed to measure performance for a project, so I did a simple test with one million file_exists() and is_file() checks. In one scenario, only seven of the files existed. In the second, all files existed. is_file() needed 3.0 for scenario one and 3.3 seconds for scenario two. file_exists() needed 2.8 and 2.9 seconds, respectively. The absolute numbers are off course system-dependant, but it clearly indicates that file_exists() is faster.
In response to seejohnrun's version to check if a URL exists. Even if the file doesn't exist you're still going to get 404 headers. You can still use get_headers if you don't have the option of using CURL..
$file = 'http://www.domain.com/somefile.jpg';
$file_headers = @get_headers($file);
if($file_headers[0] == 'HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found') {
$exists = false;
}
else {
$exists = true;
}
With PHP 7.0 on Ubuntu 17.04 and with the option allow_url_fopen=On, file_exists() returns always false when trying to check a remote file via HTTP.
So
$url="http://www.somewhere.org/index.htm";
if (file_exists($url)) echo "Wow!\n";
else echo "missing\n";
returns always "missing", even for an existing URL.
I found that in the same situation the file() function can read the remote file, so I changed my routine in
$url="http://www.somewhere.org/index.htm";
if (false!==file($url)) echo "Wow!\n";
else echo "missing\n";
This is clearly a bit slower, especially if the remote file is big, but it solves this little problem.
If you are trying to access a Windows Network Share you have to configure your WebServer with enough permissions for example:
$file = fopen("\\siscomx17\c\websapp.log",'r');
You will get an error telling you that the pathname doesnt exist this will be because Apache or IIS run as LocalSystem so you will have to enter to Services and configure Apache on "Open a session as" Create a new user that has enough permissions and also be sure that target share has the proper permissions.
Hope this save some hours of research to anyone.
file_exists() is vulnerable to race conditions and clearstatcache() is not adequate to avoid it.
The following function is a good solution:
<?php
function file_exists_safe($file) {
if (!$fd = fopen($file, 'xb')) {
return true; // the file already exists
}
fclose($fd); // the file is now created, we don't need the file handler
return false;
}
?>
The function will create a file if non-existent, following calls will fail because the file exists (in effect being a lock).
IMPORTANT: The file will remain on the disk if it was successfully created and you must clean up after you, f.ex. remove it or overwrite it. This step is purposely omitted from the function as to let scripts do calculations all the while being sure the file won't be "seized" by another process.
NOTE: This method fails if the above function is not used for checking in all other scripts/processes as it doesn't actually lock the file.
FIX: You could flock() the file to prevent that (although all other scripts similarly must check it with flock() then, see https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.flock.php). Be sure to unlock and fclose() the file AFTER you're done with it, and not within the above function:
<?php
function create_and_lock($file) {
if (!$fd = fopen($file, 'xb')) {
return false;
}
if (!flock($fd, LOCK_EX|LOCK_NB)) { // may fail for other reasons, LOCK_NB will prevent blocking
fclose($fd);
unlink($file); // clean up
return false;
}
return $fd;
}
if ($lock = create_and_lock("foo.txt")) {
// do stuff
flock($fd, LOCK_UN); // unlock
fclose($fd); // close
}
?>
SEE ALSO: https://linux.die.net/man/2/open about O_CREAT|O_EXCL (which is used with the 'x' modifier for fopen()) and problems with NFS
I wrote this little handy function to check if an image exists in a directory, and if so, return a filename which doesnt exists e.g. if you try 'flower.jpg' and it exists, then it tries 'flower[1].jpg' and if that one exists it tries 'flower[2].jpg' and so on. It works fine at my place. Ofcourse you can use it also for other filetypes than images.
<?php
function imageExists($image,$dir) {
$i=1; $probeer=$image;
while(file_exists($dir.$probeer)) {
$punt=strrpos($image,".");
if(substr($image,($punt-3),1)!==("[") && substr($image,($punt-1),1)!==("]")) {
$probeer=substr($image,0,$punt)."[".$i."]".
substr($image,($punt),strlen($image)-$punt);
} else {
$probeer=substr($image,0,($punt-3))."[".$i."]".
substr($image,($punt),strlen($image)-$punt);
}
$i++;
}
return $probeer;
}
?>
You could use document root to be on the safer side because the function does not take relative paths:
<?php
if( file_exists( $_SERVER{'DOCUMENT_ROOT'} . "/my_images/abc.jpg")) {
...
}
?>
Do not forget to put the slash '/', e.g. my doc root in Ubuntu is /var/www without the slash.
For some reason, none of the url_exists() functions posted here worked for me, so here is my own tweaked version of it.
<?php
function url_exists($url){
$url = str_replace("http://", "", $url);
if (strstr($url, "/")) {
$url = explode("/", $url, 2);
$url[1] = "/".$url[1];
} else {
$url = array($url, "/");
}
$fh = fsockopen($url[0], 80);
if ($fh) {
fputs($fh,"GET ".$url[1]." HTTP/1.1\nHost:".$url[0]."\n\n");
if (fread($fh, 22) == "HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found") { return FALSE; }
else { return TRUE; }
} else { return FALSE;}
}
?>
here a function to check if a certain URL exist:
<?php
function url_exists($url) {
$a_url = parse_url($url);
if (!isset($a_url['port'])) $a_url['port'] = 80;
$errno = 0;
$errstr = '';
$timeout = 30;
if(isset($a_url['host']) && $a_url['host']!=gethostbyname($a_url['host'])){
$fid = fsockopen($a_url['host'], $a_url['port'], $errno, $errstr, $timeout);
if (!$fid) return false;
$page = isset($a_url['path']) ?$a_url['path']:'';
$page .= isset($a_url['query'])?'?'.$a_url['query']:'';
fputs($fid, 'HEAD '.$page.' HTTP/1.0'."\r\n".'Host: '.$a_url['host']."\r\n\r\n");
$head = fread($fid, 4096);
fclose($fid);
return preg_match('#^HTTP/.*\s+[200|302]+\s#i', $head);
} else {
return false;
}
}
?>
in my CMS, I am using it with those lines:
<?php
if(!isset($this->f_exist[$image]['exist']))
if(strtolower(substr($fimage,0,4)) == 'http' || strtolower(substr($fimage,0,4)) == 'www.'){
if(strtolower(substr($image,0,4)) == 'www.'){
$fimage = 'http://'.$fimage;
$image = 'http://'.$image;
}
$this->f_exist[$image]['exist'] = $this->url_exists($fimage); //for now
} else {
$this->f_exist[$image]['exist'] = ($fimage!='' && file_exists($fimage) && is_file($fimage) && is_readable($fimage) && filesize($fimage)>0);
}
}
?>
When using file_exists, seems you cannot do:
<?php
foreach ($possibles as $poss)
{
if ( file_exists(SITE_RANGE_IMAGE_PATH .$this->range_id .'/ '.$poss .'.jpg') )
{
// exists
}
else
{
// not found
}
}
?>
so you must do:
<?php
foreach ($possibles as $poss)
{
$img = SITE_RANGE_IMAGE_PATH .$this->range_id .'/ '.$poss .'.jpg'
if ( file_exists($img) )
{
// exists
}
else
{
// not found
}
}
?>
Then things will work fine.
This is at least the case on this Windows system running php 5.2.5 and apache 2.2.3
Not sure if it is down to the concatenation or the fact theres a constant in there, i'm about to run away and test just that...
file_exists will have trouble finding your file if the file permissions are not read enabled for 'other' when not owned by your php user. I thought I was having trouble with a directory name having a space in it (/users/andrew/Pictures/iPhoto Library/AlbumData.xml) but the reality was that there weren't read permissions on Pictures, iPhoto Library or AlbumData.xml. Once I fixed that, file_exists worked.
I made a bit of code that sees whether a file served via RTSP is there or not:
<?php
function rtsp_exists($url) {
$server = parse_url($url, PHP_URL_HOST);
$port = "554";
$hdrs = "DESCRIBE " .$url ." RTSP/1.0"."\r\n\r\n";
//Open connection (15s timeout)
$sh = fsockopen($server, $port, $err, $err_otp, 15);
//Check connections
if(!$sh) return false;
//Send headers
fputs($sh,$hdrs);
//Receive data (1KB)
$rtds = fgets($sh, 1024);
//Close socket
fclose($sh);
return strpos($rtds, "200 OK") > 0;
}
?>
Note on openspecies entry (excellent btw, thanks!).
If your server cannot resolve its own DNS, use the following:
$f = preg_replace('/www\.yourserver\.(net|com)/', getenv('SERVER_ADDR'), $f);
Just before the $h = @get_headers($f); line.
Replace the extensions (net|com|...) in the regexp expression as appropriate.
EXAMPLE:
File you are checking for: http://www.youserver.net/myfile.gif
Server IP: 10.0.0.125
The preg_replace will effectively 'resolve' the address for you by assigning $f as follows:
http://10.0.0.125/myfile.gif
NB: This function expects the full server-related pathname to work.
For example, if you run a PHP routine from within, for example, the root folder of your website and and ask:
$bstr = file_exists("/images/Proofreading_patients.jpg");
You will get FALSE even if that file does exist off root.
You need to add
$bstr = file_exists(__DIR_."/images/Proofreading_patients.jpg");
to get it to return TRUE - ie : /srv/www/mywebsite.com/public/images/Proofreading_patients.jpg
Here is a simpler version of url_exists:
<?php
function url_exists($url) {
$hdrs = @get_headers($url);
return is_array($hdrs) ? preg_match('/^HTTP\\/\\d+\\.\\d+\\s+2\\d\\d\\s+.*$/',$hdrs[0]) : false;
}
?>
this code here is in case you want to check if a file exists in another server:
<?php
function fileExists($path){
return (@fopen($path,"r")==true);
}
?>
unfortunately the file_exists can't reach remote servers, so I used the fopen function.
Wordpress always prepends the full URL to any file it stores in its database so, as noted elsewhere, file_exists() can't find the file since it uses the 'document root', not the URL. An easy way out of this is to use:
file_exists (str_replace (home_url(), $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'], $file) )
to check if file $file exists. Note: As from PHP8, 'DOCUMENT_ROOT' must be enclosed within SQUARE BRACKETS, not braces as suggested by ferodano at gmail dot com
Or, if not using WP, replace home_url() above with the absolute URL name, eg. 'https://mywebsite.com' - within quotes and no trailing foreslash.
I was having problems with the file_exists when using urls, so I made this function:
<?php
function file_exists_2($filePath)
{
return ($ch = curl_init($filePath)) ? @curl_close($ch) || true : false;
}
?>
Cheers!
The code can be used to t a filename that can be used to create a new filename.
<?php
function generateRandomString($length = 8)
{
$string = "";
//character that can be used
$possible = "0123456789bcdfghjkmnpqrstvwxyz";
for($i=0;$i < $length;$i++)
{
$char = substr($possible, rand(0, strlen($possible)-1), 1);
if (!strstr($string, $char))
{
$string .= $char;
}
}
return $string;
}
function randomFile($folder = '', $extension = '')
{
$folder = trim($folder);
$folder = ($folder == '') ? './' : $folder;
//check if directory exist
if (!is_dir($folder)){ die('invalid folder given!'); }
//generate a filepath
$filepath = $folder . "/" . generateRandomString(128) . $extension;
//check if that filepath already exist, if it exist if generates again
//till if gets one that doesn't exist
while(file_exists($filepath))
{
$filepath = $folder . "/" . generateRandomString(128) . $extension;
}
return $filepath;
}
?>
file_exists() will return FALSE for broken links
$ ln -s does_not_exist my_link
$ ls -l
lrwxr-xr-x 1 user group 14 May 13 17:28 my_link -> does_not_exist
$ php -r "var_dump(file_exists('my_link'));"
bool(false)
Great alternative to file_exists() is stream_resolve_include_path()
The following script checks if there is a file with the same name and adds _n to the end of the file name, where n increases. if img.jpg is on the server, it tries with img_0.jpg, checks if it is on the server and tries with img_1.jpg.
<?php
$img = "images/".$_FILES['bilde']['name'];
$t=0;
while(file_exists($img)){
$img = "images/".$_FILES['bilde']['name'];
$img=substr($img,0,strpos($img,"."))."_$t".strstr($img,".");
$t++;
}
move_uploaded_file($_FILES['bilde']['tmp_name'], $img);
?>
If the file being tested by file_exists() is a file on a symbolically-linked directory structure, the results depend on the permissions of the directory tree node underneath the linked tree. PHP under a web server (i.e. apache) will respect permissions of the file system underneath the symbolic link, contrasting with PHP as a shell script which respects permissions of the directories that are linked (i.e. on top, and visible).
This results in files that appear to NOT exist on a symbolic link, even though they are very much in existance and indeed are readable by the web server.
Older php (v4.x) do not work with get_headers() function. So I made this one and working.
<?php
function url_exists($url) {
// Version 4.x supported
$handle = curl_init($url);
if (false === $handle)
{
return false;
}
curl_setopt($handle, CURLOPT_HEADER, false);
curl_setopt($handle, CURLOPT_FAILONERROR, true); // this works
curl_setopt($handle, CURLOPT_NOBODY, true);
curl_setopt($handle, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, false);
$connectable = curl_exec($handle);
curl_close($handle);
return $connectable;
}
?>
I spent the last two hours wondering what was wrong with my if statement: file_exists($file) was returning false, however I could call include($file) with no problem.
It turns out that I didn't realize that the php include_path value I had set in the .htaccess file didn't carry over to file_exists, is_file, etc.
Thus:
<?PHP
// .htaccess php_value include_path '/home/user/public_html/';
// includes lies in /home/user/public_html/includes/
//doesn't work, file_exists returns false
if ( file_exists('includes/config.php') )
{
include('includes/config.php');
}
//does work, file_exists returns true
if ( file_exists('/home/user/public_html/includes/config.php') )
{
include('includes/config.php');
}
?>
Just goes to show that "shortcuts for simplicity" like setting the include_path in .htaccess can just cause more grief in the long run.