PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor (original) (raw)

ftell

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

ftell — Returns the current position of the file read/write pointer

Description

Parameters

stream

The file pointer must be valid, and must point to a file successfully opened by fopen() or popen().ftell() gives undefined results for append-only streams (opened with "a" flag).

Return Values

Returns the position of the file pointer referenced bystream as an integer; i.e., its offset into the file stream.

If an error occurs, returns [false](reserved.constants.php#constant.false).

Note: Because PHP's integer type is signed and many platforms use 32bit integers, some filesystem functions may return unexpected results for files which are larger than 2GB.

Examples

Example #1 ftell() example

<?php// opens a file and read some data $fp = fopen("/etc/passwd", "r"); <span class="katex"><span class="katex-mathml"><math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"><semantics><mrow><mi>d</mi><mi>a</mi><mi>t</mi><mi>a</mi><mo>=</mo><mi>f</mi><mi>g</mi><mi>e</mi><mi>t</mi><mi>s</mi><mo stretchy="false">(</mo></mrow><annotation encoding="application/x-tex">data = fgets(</annotation></semantics></math></span><span class="katex-html" aria-hidden="true"><span class="base"><span class="strut" style="height:0.6944em;"></span><span class="mord mathnormal">d</span><span class="mord mathnormal">a</span><span class="mord mathnormal">t</span><span class="mord mathnormal">a</span><span class="mspace" style="margin-right:0.2778em;"></span><span class="mrel">=</span><span class="mspace" style="margin-right:0.2778em;"></span></span><span class="base"><span class="strut" style="height:1em;vertical-align:-0.25em;"></span><span class="mord mathnormal" style="margin-right:0.10764em;">f</span><span class="mord mathnormal" style="margin-right:0.03588em;">g</span><span class="mord mathnormal">e</span><span class="mord mathnormal">t</span><span class="mord mathnormal">s</span><span class="mopen">(</span></span></span></span>fp, 12);// where are we ? echo ftell($fp); // 11fclose($fp);?>

See Also

Found A Problem?

Mindaugas

10 years ago

`When opening a file for reading and writing via fopen('file','a+') the file pointer should be at the end of the file. However ftell() returns int(0) even if the file is not empty. Also it seems that there is two pointers, first for reading and second for writing, because it acts differently on first operation (reading or writing).

Example:

Result:
0 "123456789" 9
0 "123456789" 9
2 "3456789" 9
2 "" 2
0 "rr3456789aa" 11

`

burninleo at gmx dot net

15 years ago

When opening a file to append via fopen('file','ab') the file pointer should be at the end of the file. However ftell() returns int(0) even if the file is not empty and even after writing some text into the file.

d9k at ya dot ru

2 years ago

`Had to use

instead of

after upgrade from php 7 to 8 on ubuntu.

`

d9k at ya dot ru

2 years ago

`Had to use

instead of

after upgrade from php 7 to 8 on ubuntu.

`

mbirth at webwriters dot de

19 years ago

`Attention! If you open a file with the "text"-modifier (e.g. 'rt') and the file contains \r\n as line-endings, ftell() returns the position as if there were only \n as line-endings.

Example:
If the first line only contains 1 char followed by \r\n, the start of the second line should be position 3. (1char + \r + \n = 3 bytes) But ftell() will return 2 - ignoring one byte. If you call ftell() in line 3, the value will differ from the real value by 2 bytes. The error gets greater with every line.

(Watched this behavior in PHP 5.0.4 for Windows.)

BUT: fseek() works as expected - using the true byte values.

`

mweierophinney at gmail dot com

19 years ago

Actually, ftell() gives more than an undefined result for append only streams; it gives the offset from the end of the file as defined before any data was appended. So if you open a file that had 3017 characters, and append 41 characters, and then execute ftell(), the value returned will be 41.

php at michielvleugel dot com

19 years ago

`When trying to determine whether or not something was piped into a command line script, it is not smart to do a fgets(STDIN), because it will wait indefenitely if nothing is piped. Instead, I found ftell on STDIN to be very handy: it will return an integer of zero when something was piped, and nothing if nothing was piped to the script.

#!/usr/bin/php4 -q
<?
#following will hang if nothing is piped:
#$sometext = fgets(STDIN, 256)

$tell = ftell(STDIN);

if (is_integer($tell)==true)
{echo "Something was piped: ".fread(STDIN,256)."\n";}
else
{echo "Nothing was piped\n";}

?>

`

missilesilo at gmail dot com

18 years ago

`In response to php at michielvleugel dot com:

This does not seem to be the case with PHP 5.2.0 and FreeBSD 5.4.

#!/usr/local/bin/php

root@localhost:/home/david# echo Hello World | ./test.php
int(0)
root@localhost:/home/david# ./test.php
int(6629927)

When something is piped to the script, it returns an integer value of 0, however, it also returns an integer when nothing is piped to the script.

The code should be modified to this:

#!/usr/local/bin/php
<?php
$tell = ftell(STDIN);

if (

$tell === 0)
echo "Something was piped: " . fread(STDIN,256) . "\n";
else
echo "Nothing was piped\n";
?>

And the result is:

root@localhost:/home/david# echo Hello World | ./test.php
Something was piped: Hello World
root@localhost:/home/david# ./test.php
Nothing was piped

`