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이 문서에서는 PHP 중국어 웹사이트 매뉴얼 풀어 주다
(PHP 5)
The RecursiveDirectoryIterator provides an interface for iterating recursively over filesystem directories.
$path
[, int $flags
= FilesystemIterator::KEY_AS_PATHNAME | FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_AS_FILEINFO
] )$allow_links
= false
] )$path
[, int $flags
= FilesystemIterator::KEY_AS_PATHNAME | FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_AS_FILEINFO | FilesystemIterator::SKIP_DOTS
] )$flags
] )
版本 | 说明 |
---|---|
5.3.0 | The FilesystemIterator was introduced as the parent class. Previously, the parent was the DirectoryIterator. |
5.3.0 | Implements SeekableIterator . |
5.2.11, 5.3.1 | Added RecursiveDirectoryIterator::FOLLOW_SYMLINKS |
[#1] flobee [2015-03-29 02:58:32]
In this doc page i see things for to hide hidden files (also for opendir() or readdir() .... this should be mentiond all there
<?php
// not hidden but on most OS systems Win, *nix, OSX..
if ($file == '.' || $file == '..') {
// "." current dir info,
// ".." dir above info,
continue;
?>
or
<?php
if $name[0] === '.' // NOT OK FOLKS
?>
Think:
"... and then came Polly.avi" is the title of the Movi. What do you do then?
Windows does it different with hidden files than unix based systems.
For unix based systems something like this should work:
<?php
if (preg_match('/^(\.\w+|\.$|\.\.$)/i', $location)) {
}
// must be ok: "..some thing", "... some thing"
?>
I know you do it (if $name[0] === '.' ) because it is much faster. But it is NOT correct and some day you miss things like me today :-)
[#2] sun [2014-02-28 20:39:01]
Since I continue to run into implementations across the net that are unintentionally running into this trap ?? beware:
RecursiveDirectoryIterator recurses without limitations into the full filesystem tree.
Do NOT do the following, unless you intentionally want to infinitely recurse without limitations:
<?php
$directory = new \RecursiveDirectoryIterator($path);
$iterator = new \RecursiveIteratorIterator($directory);
$files = array();
foreach ($iterator as $info) {
if (...custom conditions...) {
$files[] = $info->getPathname();
}
}
?>
1. RecursiveDirectoryIterator is just a RecursiveIterator that recurses into its children, until no more children are found.
2. The instantiation of RecursiveIteratorIterator causes RecursiveDirectoryIterator to *immediately* recurse infinitely into the entire filesystem tree (starting from the given base path).
3. Unnecessary filesystem recursion is slow. In 90% of all cases, this is not what you want.
Remember this simple rule of thumb:
?? A RecursiveDirectoryIterator must be FILTERED or you have a solid reason for why it shouldn't.
On PHP <5.4, implement the following - your custom conditions move into a proper filter:
<?php
$directory = new \RecursiveDirectoryIterator($path, \FilesystemIterator::FOLLOW_SYMLINKS);
$filter = new MyRecursiveFilterIterator($directory);
$iterator = new \RecursiveIteratorIterator($filter);
$files = array();
foreach ($iterator as $info) {
$files[] = $info->getPathname();
}
class MyRecursiveFilterIterator extends \RecursiveFilterIterator {
public function accept() {
$filename = $this->current()->getFilename();
// Skip hidden files and directories.
if ($name[0] === '.') {
return FALSE;
}
if ($this->isDir()) {
// Only recurse into intended subdirectories.
return $name === 'wanted_dirname';
}
else {
// Only consume files of interest.
return strpos($name, 'wanted_filename') === 0;
}
}
}
?>
On PHP 5.4+, PHP core addressed the slightly cumbersome issue of having to create an entirely new class and you can leverage the new RecursiveCallbackFilterIterator instead:
<?php
$directory = new \RecursiveDirectoryIterator($path, \FilesystemIterator::FOLLOW_SYMLINKS);
$filter = new \RecursiveCallbackFilterIterator($directory, function ($current, $key, $iterator) {
// Skip hidden files and directories.
if ($current->getFilename()[0] === '.') {
return FALSE;
}
if ($current->isDir()) {
// Only recurse into intended subdirectories.
return $current->getFilename() === 'wanted_dirname';
}
else {
// Only consume files of interest.
return strpos($current->getFilename(), 'wanted_filename') === 0;
}
});
$iterator = new \RecursiveIteratorIterator($filter);
$files = array();
foreach ($iterator as $info) {
$files[] = $info->getPathname();
}
?>
Have fun!
[#3] rockerBOO [2014-01-19 16:01:47]
When looping through the RecursiveDirectoryIterator , the results use SplFileInfo.
[#4] Edward Rudd [2013-12-18 16:11:07]
(related to the post about exceptions in getChildren().
instead of subclassing you can simply use the CATCH_GET_CHILD flag for RecursiveIteratorIterator
new RecursiveIteratorIterator($diriter, RecursiveIteratorIterator::CATCH_GET_CHILD);
[#5] dblanchard1 at bbox dot fr [2013-11-13 09:07:15]
If you want to copy all files recursively from a source directory to some destination :
$directory = new RecursiveDirectoryIterator("./source_path/");
foreach (new RecursiveIteratorIterator($directory) as $filename=>$current) {
$src = $current->getPathName();
$dest = "./destination_path/" . $current->getFileName();
echo "copy " . $src . " => " . $dest . "\n";
copy($src, $dest);
}
I hope it can help someone because when I looked for this solution I had to transform another example to get it.
[#6] catinahat at cool dot fr dot nf [2013-01-19 00:44:51]
If you need to convert a nested directory tree into a multidimensional array, use this code:
<?php
$ritit = new RecursiveIteratorIterator(new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($startpath), RecursiveIteratorIterator::CHILD_FIRST);
$r = array();
foreach ($ritit as $splFileInfo) {
$path = $splFileInfo->isDir()
? array($splFileInfo->getFilename() => array())
: array($splFileInfo->getFilename());
for ($depth = $ritit->getDepth() - 1; $depth >= 0; $depth--) {
$path = array($ritit->getSubIterator($depth)->current()->getFilename() => $path);
}
$r = array_merge_recursive($r, $path);
}
print_r($r);
?>
[#7] Josh Heidenreich [2012-02-14 03:51:40]
The returned object is an iterator of SplFileInfo objects.
[#8] antennen [2011-01-02 09:40:22]
If you use RecursiveDirectoryIterator with RecursiveIteratorIterator and run into UnexpectedValueException you may use this little hack to ignore those directories, such as lost+found on linux.
<?php
class IgnorantRecursiveDirectoryIterator extends RecursiveDirectoryIterator {
function getChildren() {
try {
return new IgnorantRecursiveDirectoryIterator($this->getPathname());
} catch(UnexpectedValueException $e) {
return new RecursiveArrayIterator(array());
}
}
}
?>
Use just like the normal RecursiveDirectoryIterator.
[#9] Thriault [2010-04-09 00:05:52]
If you would like to get, say, all the *.php files in your project folder, recursively, you could use the following:
<?php
$Directory = new RecursiveDirectoryIterator('path/to/project/');
$Iterator = new RecursiveIteratorIterator($Directory);
$Regex = new RegexIterator($Iterator, '/^.+\.php$/i', RecursiveRegexIterator::GET_MATCH);
?>
$Regex will contain a single index array for each PHP file.
[#10] megar [2009-07-15 01:57:07]
Usage example:
To see all the files, and count the space usage:
<?php
$ite=new RecursiveDirectoryIterator("/path/");
$bytestotal=0;
$nbfiles=0;
foreach (new RecursiveIteratorIterator($ite) as $filename=>$cur) {
$filesize=$cur->getSize();
$bytestotal+=$filesize;
$nbfiles++;
echo "$filename => $filesize\n";
}
$bytestotal=number_format($bytestotal);
echo "Total: $nbfiles files, $bytestotal bytes\n";
?>
[#11] alvaro at demogracia dot com [2008-09-18 08:15:45]
Usage example:
<?php
$path = realpath('/etc');
$objects = new RecursiveIteratorIterator(new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($path), RecursiveIteratorIterator::SELF_FIRST);
foreach($objects as $name => $object){
echo "$name\n";
}
?>
This prints a list of all files and directories under $path (including $path ifself). If you want to omit directories, remove the RecursiveIteratorIterator::SELF_FIRST part.