Call me out if this is a duplicate question, but this is starting to get ridiculous.
I want to, with PHP:
GET http://www.example.com/hello.xyz
And add this header to the request:
"X-Header-Name: $foobar"
where foobar comes from a php variable that is already defined.
and then store the response in a variable. That's it! Nothing more, nothing less.
But I can't find it!
I don't want to use curl or anything like that, it'd slow it down too much if I run curl everytime. Edit: My main concern with using curl is about compatibility with Windows (local server) vs. Linux (deployment server).
<?php
echo "So, how do I do it in the simplest way possible?";
?>
You may use file_get_contents if you don't want to use curl but not sure about speed but it's php
's built in function where curl
is not. When talking about speed
then I think whatever you use for a remote request, the speed/performance will depend on the network connection speed more than the function/library and maybe there is a bit different among these (curl/file_get_contents/fsockopen) but I think it'll be a very little (1-2 %) and you can't catch the difference, it'll seem almost same.
$opts = array(
'http'=>array(
'method'=>"GET",
'header'=>"X-Header-Name: $foobar"
));
$context = stream_context_create($opts);
$data = file_get_contents('http://www.example.com/hello.xyz', false, $context);
f($data) {
// do something with data
}
Also, if you want to use curl
then you may use this
$ch = curl_init();
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, array("X-Header-Name: $foobar"));
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL, "http://www.example.com/hello.xyz");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true);
$data = curl_exec($ch);
curl_close($ch);
if ($curl_errno == 0) {
// $data received in $data
}
Also, check this answer, it may help you to decide.