Replacing file content in PHP

2020-03-09 07:11发布

I need a function just like preg_replace but instead of strings I need it to work with files / file content.

3条回答
霸刀☆藐视天下
2楼-- · 2020-03-09 07:53

@codaddict's answer is quite sufficent for small files (and would be how I would implement it if the size of the file was under a MiB). However it will eat up a ton of memory, and as such you should be careful when reading large files.

If you want a much more memory friendly version, you could use stream filters...

class ReplaceText_filter extends php_user_filter {
    protected $search = '';
    protected $replace = '';

    public function filter($in, $out, &$consumed, $closing) {
        while ($bucket = stream_bucket_make_writable($in)) {
            $bucket->data = str_replace(
                $this->search, 
                $this->replace, 
                $bucket->data
            );
            $consumed += $bucket->datalen;
            stream_bucket_append($out, $bucket);
        }
        return PSFS_PASS_ON;
    }

    public function onCreate() {
        if (strpos($this->filtername, '.') === false) return false;
        list ($name, $arguments) = explode('.', $this->filtername, 2);
        $replace = '';
        $search = $arguments;
        if (strpos($arguments, '|') !== false) {
            list ($search, $replace) = explode('|', $arguments, 2);
        }
        if (strpos($search, ',') !== false) {
            $search = explode(',', $search);
        }
        if (strpos($replace, ',') !== false) {
            $search = explode(',', $replace);
        }
        $this->search = $search;
        $this->replace = $replace;
    }
}
stream_filter_register('replacetext.*', 'ReplaceText_Filter');

So, then you can append an arbitrary stream filter. The filter's name determines the arguments:

$search = 'foo';
$replace = 'bar';
$name = 'replacetext.'.$search.'|'.$replace;
stream_filter_append($stream, $name);

or for arrays,

$search = array('foo', 'bar');
$replace = array('bar', 'baz');
$name = 'replacetext.'.implode(',', $search).'|'.implode(',', $replace);
stream_filter_append($stream, $name);

Obviously this is a really simple example (and doesn't do a lot of error checking), but it allows you to do something like this:

$f1 = fopen('mysourcefile', 'r');
$f2 = fopen('mytmpfile', 'w');
$search = array('foo', 'bar');
$replace = array('bar', 'baz');
$name = 'replacetext.'.implode(',', $search).'|'.implode(',', $replace);
stream_filter_append($f1, $name);
stream_copy_to_stream($f1, $f2);
fclose($f1);
fclose($f2);
rename('mytmpfile', 'mysourcefile');

And that will keep memory usage very low while processing potentially huge (GiB or TiB) files...

Oh, and the other cool thing, is it can inline edit differing stream types. What I mean by that is that you can read from a HTTP stream, edit inline, and write to a file stream. It's quite powerful (as you can chain these filters)...

查看更多
ら.Afraid
3楼-- · 2020-03-09 07:57
<?php

$pattern = "/created/";
$replacement = "XXXXX";
$file_name = "regex.txt";
$getting_file_contents = file_get_contents($file_name);

echo("Original file contents : " . "<br><br>");
var_dump($getting_file_contents);
echo("<br><br><br>");

if ($getting_file_contents == true) {
  echo($file_name . " had been read succesfully" . "<br><br><br>");

  $replace_data_in_file = preg_replace($pattern, $replacement, $getting_file_contents);
  $writing_replaced_data = file_put_contents($file_name, $replace_data_in_file);
  echo("New file contents : " . "<br><br>");
  var_dump($replace_data_in_file);
  echo("<br><br>");

  if ($writing_replaced_data == true) {
    echo("Data in the file changed");
  }
  else {
    exit("Cannot change data in the file");
  }
}
else {
  exit("Unable to get file contents!");
}

?>
查看更多
太酷不给撩
4楼-- · 2020-03-09 08:02

You can do:

$file = 'filename';
file_put_contents($file,str_replace('find','replace',file_get_contents($file)));
查看更多
登录 后发表回答