Zlib 函数
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gzopen

(PHP 4, PHP 5)

gzopenOpen gz-file

说明

resource gzopen ( string $filename , string $mode [, int $use_include_path = 0 ] )

Opens a gzip (.gz) file for reading or writing.

gzopen() can be used to read a file which is not in gzip format; in this case gzread() will directly read from the file without decompression.

参数

filename

The file name.

mode

As in fopen() (rb or wb) but can also include a compression level (wb9) or a strategy: f for filtered data as in wb6f, h for Huffman only compression as in wb1h. (See the description of deflateInit2 in zlib.h for more information about the strategy parameter.)

use_include_path

You can set this optional parameter to 1, if you want to search for the file in the include_path too.

返回值

Returns a file pointer to the file opened, after that, everything you read from this file descriptor will be transparently decompressed and what you write gets compressed.

If the open fails, the function returns FALSE.

范例

Example #1 gzopen() Example

<?php
$fp 
gzopen("/tmp/file.gz""r");
?>

参见


Zlib 函数
在线手册:中文 英文
PHP手册
PHP手册 - N: Open gz-file

用户评论:

David Gero dave at havidave dot com (06-Sep-2011 10:02)

gzopen("php://output","wb") doesn't work on a web server, nor does fopen("compress.zlib://php://output","wb").

Here is a snippet to gzip a file and output it on the fly, without using a temporary file, without reading the file into memory, and without reading the file more than once:

<?php
$fin
= fopen($file, "rb");
if (
$fin !== FALSE) {
   
$fout = fopen("php://output", "wb");
    if (
$fout !== FALSE) {
   
// write gzip header
   
fwrite($fout, "\x1F\x8B\x08\x08".pack("V", filemtime($file))."\0\xFF", 10);
   
// write the original file name
   
$oname = str_replace("\0", "", basename($file));
   
fwrite($fout, $oname."\0", 1+strlen($oname));
   
// add the deflate filter using default compression level
   
$fltr = stream_filter_append($fout, "zlib.deflate", STREAM_FILTER_WRITE, -1);
   
// set up the CRC32 hashing context
   
$hctx = hash_init("crc32b");
   
// turn off the time limit
   
if (!ini_get("safe_mode")) set_time_limit(0);
   
$con = TRUE;
   
$fsize = 0;
    while ((
$con !== FALSE) && !feof($fin)) {
       
// deflate works best with buffers >32K
       
$con = fread($fin, 64 * 1024);
        if (
$con !== FALSE) {
       
hash_update($hctx, $con);
       
$clen = strlen($con);
       
$fsize += $clen;
       
fwrite($fout, $con, $clen);
        }
    }
   
// remove the deflate filter
   
stream_filter_remove($fltr);
   
// write the CRC32 value
    // hash_final is a string, not an integer
   
$crc = hash_final($hctx, TRUE);
   
// need to reverse the hash_final string so it's little endian
   
fwrite($fout, $crc[3].$crc[2].$crc[1].$crc[0], 4);
   
// write the original uncompressed file size
   
fwrite($fout, pack("V", $fsize), 4);
   
fclose($fout);
    }
   
fclose($fin);
}
?>

plasma (06-Sep-2008 04:06)

This worked unstable for me under high load (50+ files per second):

<?php
    $gz
= gzopen ( $file, 'w9' );
   
gzwrite ( $gz, $content );
   
gzclose ( $gz );
?>

The following works fine:

<?php
    $f
= fopen ( $file, 'w' );
   
fwrite ( $f, gzcompress ( $content, 9 ) );
   
fclose ( $f );
?>

katzlbtjunk at hotmail dot com (23-Apr-2008 08:15)

WARNING gzopen and gzread have a major disadvantage. They makes NO checksum and NO length verification of the gzipped data and discard this valuable information. This should be documented here.

rob at digital-crocus dot com (01-Jun-2005 01:28)

dtorop932 at hotmail dot com's comments, according to my tests, is incorrect. That code wishes to download the entire file before parsing, which is inconvinient. The wget method works though.

pentek_imre at mailbox dot hu (29-Jan-2005 06:36)

Be aware that when opening a remote file on a http server the gzopen will return by default false after 120 seconds waiting to any answer.

dtorop932 at hotmail dot com (21-Oct-2004 08:04)

RE dubious's comment: "Being able to read gzip streams from ftp and http is near the top of my personal wishlist at the moment..."

One way to read a gzip stream over http is to daisychain stream wrappers, e.g.:

<?
$fp = fopen("compress.zlib://http://some.website.org/example.gz", "r");
?>

-delete-this-part-dubious at 2xtreme dot net (03-Jan-2002 03:22)

"On the fly" gunzipping actually DOES seem to work - it just appears that only LOCAL streams/files (including php://stdin) can be accessed for some reason.  I THINK (but have not yet tested) that you could similarly gzopen "php://stdout" and pass a stream of gzipped data to the browser (when run from a web page) or console (when run standalone) through there.

I HAVE tested scripts from the command line like:

wget -q -O- ftp://some.host.net/pub/some_gzip_file.gz | php gunzip_stuff.php

where gunzip_stuff.php would be a script that gzopened "php://stdin" and did gzgets from that stream, and it seems to work fine, but that obviously doesn't help someone wanting to grab gzipped streams from remote sites from a web-based script.

Being able to read gzip streams from ftp and http is near the top of my personal wishlist at the moment...