If you want to empty a file of it's contents bare in mind that opening a file in w mode truncates the file automatically, so instead of doing...
<?php
$fp = fopen("/tmp/file.txt", "r+");
ftruncate($fp, 0);
fclose($fp);
?>
You can just do...
<?php
$fp = fopen("/tmp/file.txt", "w");
fclose($fp);
?>
ftruncate
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
ftruncate — Reduz um arquivo a um tamanho especificado
Descrição
bool ftruncate
( resource $handle
, int $size
)
Pega o ponteiro de arquivo handle e reduz o arquivo ao comprimento size.
Parâmetros
- handle
-
O ponteiro do arquivo.
Nota:
O ponteiro handle deve estar aberto para escrita.
- size
-
O tamanho pro qual reduzir.
Nota:
Se size for maior que o arquivo, o arquivo será estendido com bytes nulos.
Se size for menor, os dados extras serão perdidos.
Valor Retornado
Retorna TRUE em caso de sucesso ou FALSE em falhas.
Histórico
| Versão | Descrição |
|---|---|
| PHP 4.3.3 | Antes desta versão, ftruncate() retornava integer no valor 1 no caso de sucesso, ao invés de boolean TRUE. |
Notas
Nota:
O ponteiro do arquivo não é alterado.
User Contributed Notes
ftruncate
ftruncate
emailfire at gmail dot com
15-Jun-2011 11:14
15-Jun-2011 11:14
eurosat7 at yahoo dot de
21-Apr-2011 05:31
21-Apr-2011 05:31
If you want to ftruncate but keep the end:
<?php
function ftruncatestart($filename,$maxfilesize){
$size=filesize($filename);
if ($size<$maxfilesize*1.0) return;
$maxfilesize=$maxfilesize*0.5; //we don't want to do it too often...
$fh=fopen($filename,"r+");
$start=ftell($fh);
fseek($fh,-$maxfilesize,SEEK_END);
$drop=fgets($fh);
$offset=ftell($fh);
for ($x=0;$x<$maxfilesize;$x++){
fseek($fh,$x+$offset);
$c=fgetc($fh);
fseek($fh,$x);
fwrite($fh,$c);
}
ftruncate($fh,$maxfilesize-strlen($drop));
fclose($fh);
}
?>
It will not just cut it but search for a newline so you avoid corrupting your csv or logfiles. But I don't know if you will stress the reading head of your drive. ;)
yetihehe at yetihehe dot com
22-Apr-2010 12:12
22-Apr-2010 12:12
Simple script which will delete spaces from end of php files (suitable in big sites, when you are including many files before sending headers and without output buffering):
<?php
function mapfiles($func,$filename,$level=0) {
if(is_dir($filename)) {
if($level>30) return; //limit recurence in case of looped dirs
$handle=opendir($filename);
while(($dirname=readdir($handle))!==false) {
if($dirname=='.'||$dirname=='..') continue;
mapfiles($func,$filename.'/'.$dirname,$level+1);
}
closedir($handle);
} else {
$func($filename);
}
}
function scanfile($filename) {
if(substr($filename,-4)!=".php") return;
$ff=fopen($filename,"r+");
fseek($ff, -10, SEEK_END);
$str=fread($ff,12);
$matches=array();
if(preg_match('/\?>(\s+)$/',$str,$matches)) {
$fsize=filesize($filename);
ftruncate($ff, $fsize-strlen($matches[1]));
}
fclose($ff);
}
mapfiles("scanfile",".");
?>
rc at opelgt dot org
05-Jan-2008 08:49
05-Jan-2008 08:49
Writing after ftruncate
I didnt expect that I can write in the middle of nowhere. I thought that I would write at the beginning of the file but the first 4 bytes were filled automatically with NULLs followed by "56":
<?php
$str1 = 1234;
$str2 = 56;
$datei = "test.txt";
$dh = fopen($datei,"w");
fwrite($dh, $str1);
fclose($dh);
$dh = fopen ($datei,"r+");
echo "content: ".fread($dh, filesize($datei))."<br>";
echo "pointer after fread at: ".ftell($dh)."<br>";
ftruncate($dh, 0);
echo "pointer after truncate at: ".ftell($dh)."<br>";
fwrite($dh, $str2);
echo "pointer after fwrite at: ".ftell($dh)."<br>";
rewind($dh);
echo "pointer after rewind at: ".ftell($dh)."<br>";
$str = fread($dh, 6);
echo "content: $str<br>in ASCII: ";
for($i = 0; $i < 6; $i++)
echo ord($str{$i})."-";
fclose($dh);
/*
OUTPUT:
content: 1234
pointer after fread at: 4
pointer after truncate at: 4
pointer after fwrite at: 6
pointer after rewind at: 0
content: 56
in ASCII: 0-0-0-0-53-54
*/
?>
So not only ftruncate is filling an empty file up with NULLs as in the note before. Fread is filling leading space with NULLs too.
mike at mikeleigh dot com
03-Jan-2007 10:30
03-Jan-2007 10:30
I have produced a number of tests below which walk through my findings of the ftruncate function. For the impatient among you ftruncate can be used to increase the size of the file and will fill the rest of the file with CHR 0 or ASCII NULL. It can be used as a very convenient way of making a 1Mb file for instance.
Test 1
<?php
/*
Test 1: Write "some text" to a file.
Result: The text "some text" should be present in test_1.txt
*/
$fp = fopen('test_1.txt', 'w+');
fwrite($fp, 'some text');
?>
The first test is only here to make sure that a file can be written with some text.
Test 2
<?php
/*
Test 2: Write "some text" to a file and ftruncate the file to 4 bytes.
Result: The text "some" should be present in test_2.txt as the file will have been truncated to 4 bytes.
*/
$fp = fopen('test_2.txt', 'w+');
fwrite($fp, 'some text');
ftruncate($fp, 4);
?>
As expected the file has been truncated to 4 bytes.
Test 3
<?php
/*
Test 3: Write "some text" to a file and ftruncate the file to 40 bytes.
Result: The text "some text" should be present in test_3.txt as the file will have been truncated to 40 bytes.
*/
$fp = fopen('test_3.txt', 'w+');
fwrite($fp, 'some text');
ftruncate($fp, 40);
?>
Interestingly the file has increased from 9 bytes to 40 bytes. The remaining 31 bytes of the file are ASCII code 0 or NULL though.
Further notes can be found here http://mikeleigh.com/links/ftruncate

ftell