On Jun 18, 2007, at 3:30 PM, Myron Turner wrote:
I've written a plugin for DokuWiki which uses the following
DokuWiki function for reading files:
function io_readFile($file,$clean=true){
$ret = '';
if(@file_exists($file)){
if(substr($file,-3) == '.gz'){
$ret = join('',gzfile($file));
}else if(substr($file,-4) == '.bz2'){
$ret = bzfile($file);
}else{
$ret = join('',file($file));
}
}
if($clean){
return cleanText($ret);
}else{
return $ret;
}
}
On Linux machines, this seems to behave as you would hope, that is,
if the file doesn't exist then you get back a null string. In any
event, none of the users who have installed it on Linux machines
have had a problem with it. And I have done several installs
myself. But one user installed the plugin on a Windows machine and
the code fell through to $ret = join('',file($file)) even though
there was no $file. The result was an error message:
Permission denied in *E:\Program Files\EasyPHP 2.0b1
\www\dokuwiki\inc\io.php* on line *97
*Line 97 is the join. So the function is attempting to read a non-
existent file.
I was just wondering whether there is some difference in the way
his PHP version handles the @ operator in:
if(@file_exists($file))
That is, is it possible that by suppressing errors, this expression
somehow returns true? And is it a bug?
Are you sure the file doesn't exist? Could it just be that it exists,
but the permissions are not set correctly?
Ed
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