fopenOpens file or URLDescriptionintfopenstringfilenamestringmodeintuse_include_path
If filename begins with "http://" (not
case sensitive), an HTTP 1.0 connection is opened to the
specified server, the page is requested using the HTTP GET
method, and a file pointer is returned to the beginning
of the body of the response. A 'Host:' header is sent with the
request in order to handle name-based virtual hosts.
As of PHP 4.3.0 (not yet released), if you have compiled in
support for OpenSSL, you may use "https://" to open an HTTP
connection over SSL.
Note that the file pointer allows you to retrieve only the
body of the response; to retrieve the HTTP
response header you need to be using PHP 4.0.5 or later;
The headers will be stored in the $http_response_header variable.
As of PHP 4.3.0 (not yet released), the header information can
be retrieved using the file_get_wrapper_data.
HTTP connections are read-only; you cannot write data or copy
files to an HTTP resource.
Versions prior to PHP 4.0.5 do not handle HTTP redirects. Because
of this, directories must include trailing slashes.
If filename begins with "ftp://" (not case
sensitive), an ftp connection to the specified server is opened
and a pointer to the requested file is returned. If the server
does not support passive mode ftp, this will fail. You can open
files for either reading or writing via ftp (but not both
simultaneously). If the remote file already exists on the ftp
server and you attempt to open it for writing, this will fail.
If you need to update existing files over ftp, use
ftp_connect.
If filename is one of "php://stdin",
"php://stdout", or "php://stderr", the corresponding stdio
stream will be opened. (This was introduced in PHP 3.0.13;
in earlier versions, a filename such as "/dev/stdin" or
"/dev/fd/0" must be used to access the stdio streams.)
If filename begins with anything else, the
file will be opened from the filesystem, and a file pointer to
the file opened is returned.
If the open fails, the function returns &false;.
mode may be any of the following:
'r' - Open for reading only; place the file pointer at the
beginning of the file.
'r+' - Open for reading and writing; place the file pointer at
the beginning of the file.
'w' - Open for writing only; place the file pointer at the
beginning of the file and truncate the file to zero length.
If the file does not exist, attempt to create it.
'w+' - Open for reading and writing; place the file pointer at
the beginning of the file and truncate the file to zero
length. If the file does not exist, attempt to create it.
'a' - Open for writing only; place the file pointer at the end
of the file. If the file does not exist, attempt to create
it.
'a+' - Open for reading and writing; place the file pointer at
the end of the file. If the file does not exist, attempt to
create it.
The mode may contain the letter
'b'. This is useful only on systems which differentiate between
binary and text files (i.e. Windows. It's useless on Unix).
If not needed, this will be ignored.
You can use the optional third parameter and set it to "1", if
you want to search for the file in the include_path, too.
fopen example
If you are experiencing problems with reading and writing to
files and you're using the server module version of PHP, remember
to make sure that the files and directories you're using are
accessible to the server process.
On the Windows platform, be careful to escape any backslashes
used in the path to the file, or use forward slashes.
See also fclose,
fsockopen,
socket_set_timeout, and
popen.