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A simple and modern approach to stream filtering in PHP
Table of contents
PHP's stream filtering system is great!
It offers very powerful stream filtering options and comes with a useful set of built-in filters. These filters can be used to easily and efficiently perform various transformations on-the-fly, such as:
But let's face it: Its API is difficult to work with and its documentation is subpar. This combined means its powerful features are often neglected.
This project aims to make these features more accessible to a broader audience.
This lightweight library consists only of a few simple functions.
All functions reside under the Clue\StreamFilter
namespace.
The below examples assume you use an import statement similar to this:
use Clue\StreamFilter as Filter;
Filter\append(…);
Alternatively, you can also refer to them with their fully-qualified name:
\Clue\StreamFilter\append(…);
The append($stream, $callback, $read_write = STREAM_FILTER_ALL)
function can be used to
append a filter callback to the given stream.
Each stream can have a list of filters attached. This function appends a filter to the end of this list.
This function returns a filter resource which can be passed to remove()
.
If the given filter can not be added, it throws an Exception
.
The $stream
can be any valid stream resource, such as:
$stream = fopen('demo.txt', 'w+');
The $callback
should be a valid callable function which accepts an individual chunk of data
and should return the updated chunk:
$filter = Filter\append($stream, function ($chunk) {
// will be called each time you read or write a $chunk to/from the stream
return $chunk;
});
As such, you can also use native PHP functions or any other callable
:
Filter\append($stream, 'strtoupper');
// will write "HELLO" to the underlying stream
fwrite($stream, 'hello');
If the $callback
accepts invocation without parameters, then this signature
will be invoked once ending (flushing) the filter:
Filter\append($stream, function ($chunk = null) {
if ($chunk === null) {
// will be called once ending the filter
return 'end';
}
// will be called each time you read or write a $chunk to/from the stream
return $chunk;
});
fclose($stream);
Note: Legacy PHP versions (PHP < 5.4) do not support passing additional data from the end signal handler if the stream is being closed.
If your callback throws an Exception
, then the filter process will be aborted.
In order to play nice with PHP's stream handling, the Exception
will be
transformed to a PHP warning instead:
Filter\append($stream, function ($chunk) {
throw new \RuntimeException('Unexpected chunk');
});
// raises an E_USER_WARNING with "Error invoking filter: Unexpected chunk"
fwrite($stream, 'hello');
The optional $read_write
parameter can be used to only invoke the $callback
when either writing to the stream or only when reading from the stream:
Filter\append($stream, function ($chunk) {
// will be called each time you write to the stream
return $chunk;
}, STREAM_FILTER_WRITE);
Filter\append($stream, function ($chunk) {
// will be called each time you read from the stream
return $chunk;
}, STREAM_FILTER_READ);
Note that once a filter has been added to stream, the stream can no longer be passed to
stream_select()
(and family).Warning: stream_select(): cannot cast a filtered stream on this system in {file} on line {line}
This is due to limitations of PHP's stream filter support, as it can no longer reliably tell when the underlying stream resource is actually ready. As an alternative, consider calling
stream_select()
on the unfiltered stream and then pass the unfiltered data through thefun()
function.
The prepend($stream, $callback, $read_write = STREAM_FILTER_ALL)
function can be used to
prepend a filter callback to the given stream.
Each stream can have a list of filters attached. This function prepends a filter to the start of this list.
This function returns a filter resource which can be passed to remove()
.
If the given filter can not be added, it throws an Exception
.
$filter = Filter\prepend($stream, function ($chunk) {
// will be called each time you read or write a $chunk to/from the stream
return $chunk;
});
Except for the position in the list of filters, this function behaves exactly
like the append()
function.
For more details about its behavior, see also the append()
function.
The fun($filter, $parameters = null)
function can be used to
create a filter function which uses the given built-in $filter
.
PHP comes with a useful set of built-in filters.
Using fun()
makes accessing these as easy as passing an input string to filter
and getting the filtered output string.
$fun = Filter\fun('string.rot13');
assert('grfg' === $fun('test'));
assert('test' === $fun($fun('test'));
Please note that not all filter functions may be available depending on installed
PHP extensions and the PHP version in use.
In particular, HHVM may not offer the same filter functions
or parameters as Zend PHP.
Accessing an unknown filter function will result in a RuntimeException
:
Filter\fun('unknown'); // throws RuntimeException
Some filters may accept or require additional filter parameters – most
filters do not require filter parameters.
If given, the optional $parameters
argument will be passed to the
underlying filter handler as-is.
In particular, note how not passing this parameter at all differs from
explicitly passing a null
value (which many filters do not accept).
Please refer to the individual filter definition for more details.
For example, the string.strip_tags
filter can be invoked like this:
$fun = Filter\fun('string.strip_tags', '<a><b>');
$ret = $fun('<b>h<br>i</b>');
assert('<b>hi</b>' === $ret);
Under the hood, this function allocates a temporary memory stream, so it's recommended to clean up the filter function after use. Also, some filter functions (in particular the zlib compression filters) may use internal buffers and may emit a final data chunk on close. The filter function can be closed by invoking without any arguments:
$fun = Filter\fun('zlib.deflate');
$ret = $fun('hello') . $fun('world') . $fun();
assert('helloworld' === gzinflate($ret));
The filter function must not be used anymore after it has been closed.
Doing so will result in a RuntimeException
:
$fun = Filter\fun('string.rot13');
$fun();
$fun('test'); // throws RuntimeException
Note: If you're using the zlib compression filters, then you should be wary about engine inconsistencies between different PHP versions and HHVM. These inconsistencies exist in the underlying PHP engines and there's little we can do about this in this library. Our test suite contains several test cases that exhibit these issues. If you feel some test case is missing or outdated, we're happy to accept PRs! :)
The remove($filter)
function can be used to
remove a filter previously added via append()
or prepend()
.
$filter = Filter\append($stream, function () {
// …
});
Filter\remove($filter);
The recommended way to install this library is through Composer. New to Composer?
This project follows SemVer. This will install the latest supported version:
$ composer require clue/stream-filter:^1.4.1
See also the CHANGELOG for details about version upgrades.
This project aims to run on any platform and thus does not require any PHP extensions and supports running on legacy PHP 5.3 through current PHP 7+ and HHVM. It's highly recommended to use PHP 7+ for this project. Older PHP versions may suffer from a number of inconsistencies documented above.
To run the test suite, you first need to clone this repo and then install all dependencies through Composer:
$ composer install
To run the test suite, go to the project root and run:
$ php vendor/bin/phpunit
This project is released under the permissive MIT license.
Did you know that I offer custom development services and issuing invoices for sponsorships of releases and for contributions? Contact me (@clue) for details.