It's a very usefull function but it doesn't show all outputs. For example I only see:
[status]
[the_request]
[method]
[mtime]
[clength]
[chunked]
[content_type]
[no_cache]
[no_local_copy]
[unparsed_uri]
[uri]
[filename]
[path_info]
[allowed]
[sent_bodyct]
[bytes_sent]
[request_time]
apache_lookup_uri
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
apache_lookup_uri — Realiza una petición parcial por la URI especificada y devuelve toda la información sobre ella
Descripción
object apache_lookup_uri
( string
$filename
)Esta función realiza una petición parcial por una URI. Por si sola no es suficiente para obtener toda la información importante del recurso dado.
Esta función está soportada sólo cuando PHP está instalado como un módulo de Apache.
Parámetros
-
filename -
El nombre de archivo (URI) que está siendo solicitado.
Valores devueltos
Un object con información de la URI solicitada. Las propiedades de este object son:
- status
- the_request
- status_line
- method
- content_type
- handler
- uri
- filename
- path_info
- args
- boundary
- no_cache
- no_local_copy
- allowed
- send_bodyct
- bytes_sent
- byterange
- clength
- unparsed_uri
- mtime
- request_time
Ejemplos
Ejemplo #1 apache_lookup_uri() example
<?php
$info = apache_lookup_uri('index.php?var=value');
print_r($info);
if (file_exists($info->filename)) {
echo 'file exists!';
}
?>
El resultado del ejemplo sería algo similar a:
stdClass Object
(
[status] => 200
[the_request] => GET /dir/file.php HTTP/1.1
[method] => GET
[mtime] => 0
[clength] => 0
[chunked] => 0
[content_type] => application/x-httpd-php
[no_cache] => 0
[no_local_copy] => 1
[unparsed_uri] => /dir/index.php?var=value
[uri] => /dir/index.php
[filename] => /home/htdocs/dir/index.php
[args] => var=value
[allowed] => 0
[sent_bodyct] => 0
[bytes_sent] => 0
[request_time] => 1074282764
)
file exists!
niels dot kootstra at gmail dot com ¶
5 years ago
tester ¶
5 years ago
bug: with apache 2, apache_lookup_uri("/directory") spits out a warning and fails to return anything. apache_lookup_uri("/directory/") works.
another bug: virtual("something") forces a header flush. I know it's documented, but it would be rather wonderful if it didn't do this. You never ever want to flush headers when you're using virtual() to include a dynamic file such as a PHP or Perl file, which excludes virtual() from being used on most of any website's contents :-(.
redbeard at mdjohnson dot nospam dot us ¶
10 years ago
A useful feature is that if you have content negotiation on (Options MultiViews) Apache will resolve the negotiation for you if possible. Thus www.example.com/blah will resolve to /base/blah.php or /base/blah.html or even /base/blah.en.html as appropriate.
