The DirectoryIterator class

(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

Вступ

The DirectoryIterator class provides a simple interface for viewing the contents of filesystem directories.

Короткий огляд класу

class DirectoryIterator extends SplFileInfo implements SeekableIterator {
/* Методи */
public __construct(string $directory)
public current(): mixed
public getBasename(string $suffix = ""): string
public isDot(): bool
public key(): mixed
public next(): void
public rewind(): void
public seek(int $offset): void
public __toString(): string
public valid(): bool
/* Успадковані методи */
public SplFileInfo::getBasename(string $suffix = ""): string
public SplFileInfo::setFileClass(string $class = SplFileObject::class): void
public SplFileInfo::setInfoClass(string $class = SplFileInfo::class): void
}

Зміст

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User Contributed Notes 4 notes

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58
krystianmularczyk at gmail dot com
15 years ago
Shows us all files and catalogues in directory except "." and "..".

<?php

foreach (new DirectoryIterator('../moodle') as $fileInfo) {
if(
$fileInfo->isDot()) continue;
echo
$fileInfo->getFilename() . "<br>\n";
}

?>
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3
alvaro at demogracia dot com
7 years ago
DirectoryIterator is just an lightweight SplFileInfo iterator and its methods operate on whatever item the internal cursor points to. In other words:

<?php
$iterator
= new DirectoryIterator('C:\\');
echo
$iterator->getPathname();
?>

... will NOT print "C:\" but the path of the first file or subdirectory retrieved, e.g. "C:\$Recycle.Bin".
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5
David Lanstein
15 years ago
DirectoryIterator::getBasename() has been also been available since 5.2.2, according to the changelog (not documented yet). It takes a parameter $suffix, and is useful if, for instance, you use a naming convention for your files (e.g. ClassName.php).

The following code uses this to add recursively All*Tests.php in any subdirectory off of tests/, basically, suites of suites.

<?php
// PHPUnit boilerplate code goes here

class AllTests {
public static function
main() {
$parameters = array('verbose' => true);
PHPUnit_TextUI_TestRunner::run(self::suite(), $parameters);
}

public static function
suite() {
$suite = new PHPUnit_Framework_TestSuite('AllMyTests'); // this must be something different than the class name, per PHPUnit
$it = new AllTestsFilterIterator(
new
RecursiveIteratorIterator(
new
RecursiveDirectoryIterator(dirname(__FILE__) . '/tests')));

for (
$it->rewind(); $it->valid(); $it->next()) {
require_once(
$it->current());
$className = $it->current()->getBasename('.php');
$suite->addTest($className::suite());
}

return
$suite;
}
}
?>

Also, the AllTestsFilterIterator above extends FilterIterator, and contains one method, accept():

<?php
class AllTestsFilterIterator extends FilterIterator {
public function
accept() {
if (
preg_match('/All.*Tests\.php/', $this->current())) {
return
true;
} else {
return
false;
}
}
}
?>
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8
rogier at dsone dot nl
12 years ago
Beware of the behavior when using FilesystemIterator::UNIX_PATHS, it's not applied as you might expect.

I guess this flag is added especially for use on windows.
However, the path you construct the RecursiveDirectoryIterator or FilesystemIterator with will not be available as a unix path.
I can't say this is a bug, since most methods are just purely inherited from DirectoryIterator.

In my test, I'd expected a complete unix path. Unfortunately... not quite as expected:

<?php
// say $folder = C:\projects\lang

$flags = FilesystemIterator::KEY_AS_PATHNAME | FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_AS_FILEINFO | FilesystemIterator::SKIP_DOTS | FilesystemIterator::UNIX_PATHS;
$d_iterator = new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($folder, $flags);

echo
$d_iterator->getPath();

?>

expected result: /projects/lang (or C:/projects/lang)
actual result: C:\projects\lang
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