PHP is capable of receiving file uploads from any RFC-1867 compliant browser (which includes Netscape Navigator 3 or later, Microsoft Internet Explorer 3 with a patch from Microsoft, or later without a patch). This feature lets people upload both text and binary files. With PHP's authentication and file manipulation functions, you have full control over who is allowed to upload and what is to be done with the file once it has been uploaded.
Note that PHP also supports PUT-method file uploads as used by Netscape Composer and W3C's Amaya clients. See the PUT Method Support for more details.
A file upload screen can be built by creating a special form which looks something like this:
Example 4-4. File Upload Form <FORM ENCTYPE="multipart/form-data" ACTION="_URL_" METHOD=POST> <INPUT TYPE="hidden" name="MAX_FILE_SIZE" value="1000"> Send this file: <INPUT NAME="userfile" TYPE="file"> <INPUT TYPE="submit" VALUE="Send File"> </FORM> |
$userfile - The temporary filename in which the uploaded file was stored on the server machine.
$userfile_name - The original name of the file on the sender's system.
$userfile_size - The size of the uploaded file in bytes.
$userfile_type - The mime type of the file if the browser provided this information. An example would be "image/gif".
Files will by default be stored in the server's default temporary directory. This can be changed by setting the environment variable TMPDIR in the environment in which PHP runs. Setting it using a PutEnv() call from within a PHP script will not work though.
The PHP script which receives the uploaded file should implement whatever logic is necessary for determining what should be done with the uploaded file. You can for example use the $file_size variable to throw away any files that are either too small or too big. You could use the $file_type variable to throw away any files that didn't match a certain type criteria. Whatever the logic, you should either delete the file from the temporary directory or move it elsewhere.
The file will be deleted from the temporary directory at the end of the request if it has not been moved away or renamed.
Common Pitfalls:
The MAX_FILE_SIZE item cannot specify a file size greater than the file size that has been set in the upload_max_filesize in the PHP3.ini file or the corresponding php3_upload_max_filesize Apache .conf directive. The default is 2 Megabytes.
Please note that the CERN httpd seems to strip off everything starting at the first whitespace in the content-type mime header it gets from the client. As long as this is the case, CERN httpd will not support the file upload feature.