48

So I have this app that processes CSV files. I have a line of code to load the file.

$myFile = "data/FrontlineSMS_Message_Export_20120721.csv";  //The name of the CSV file
$fh = fopen($myFile, 'r');                             //Open the file

I would like to find a way in which I could look in the data directory and get the newest file (they all have date tags so they would be in order inside of data) and set the name equal to $myFile.

I really couldn't find and understand the documentation of php directories so any helpful resources would be appreciated as well. Thank you.

1

4 Answers 4

80

Here's an attempt using scandir, assuming the only files in the directory have timestamped filenames:

$files = scandir('data', SCANDIR_SORT_DESCENDING);
$newest_file = $files[0];

We first list all files in the directory in descending order, then, whichever one is first in that list has the "greatest" filename — and therefore the greatest timestamp value — and is therefore the newest.

Note that scandir was added in PHP 5, but its documentation page shows how to implement that behavior in PHP 4.

10
  • 2
    @Mike: Cool :) I'm away from my PHP-enabled box right now, so this sample, while only two lines long, is untested, so let me know if it doesn't do what it oughta.
    – Matchu
    Jul 22, 2012 at 3:01
  • 5
    The constants SCANDIR_SORT_DESCENDING and SCANDIR_SORT_ASCENDING have been defined starting from PHP 5.4 -- with versions of PHP 5 prior to 5.4 you'll have to use 1 and 0 respectively to define the sort order.
    – adriano72
    Aug 29, 2013 at 14:11
  • 21
    Please correct me if I'm wrong, but scandir sorts node names by an alfabetical order, not the timestamp value order.
    – Mike Doe
    Sep 28, 2013 at 16:29
  • 3
    @mike: That's correct! OP's files, as it happens, have the timestamps in the name, so sorting by name is sufficient here. Not sure how to do it by actual modification date…
    – Matchu
    Sep 28, 2013 at 20:13
  • 9
    IMPORTANT: As noted above, this is alpha sort, not an actual time stamp sort. So it will work fine if the date stamp is reflected in the filename, otherwise it will not give the expected results. Oct 23, 2015 at 18:42
10

For a search with wildcard you can use:

<?php
$path = "/var/www/html/*";

$latest_ctime = 0;
$latest_filename = '';

$files = glob($path);
foreach($files as $file)
{
        if (is_file($file) && filectime($file) > $latest_ctime)
        {
                $latest_ctime = filectime($file);
                $latest_filename = $file;
        }
}
return $latest_filename;
?>
2
0

My solution, improved solution from Max Hofmann:

$ret = [];
$dir = Yii::getAlias("@app") . "/web/uploads/problem-letters/{$this->id}"; // set directory in question

if(is_dir($dir)) {
   $ret = array_diff(scandir($dir), array(".", "..")); // get all files in dir as array and remove . and .. from it
}

usort($ret, function ($a, $b) use ($dir) {
    if(filectime($dir . "/" . $a) < filectime($dir . "/" . $b)) {
         return -1;
    } else if(filectime($dir . "/" . $a) == filectime($dir . "/" . $b)) {
         return 0;
    } else {
         return 1;
    }
}); // sort array by file creation time, older first

echo $ret[count($ret)-1]; // filename of last created file
1
0

Here's an example where I felt more confident in using my own validator rather than simply relying on a timestamp with scandir().

In this context, I want to check if my server has a more recent file version than the client's version. So I compare version numbers from the file names.

$clientAppVersion = "1.0.5";
$latestVersionFileName = "";

$directory = "../../download/updates/darwin/"
$arrayOfFiles = scandir($directory);
foreach ($arrayOfFiles as $file) {
    if (is_file($directory . $file)) {
        // Your custom code here... For example:
        $serverFileVersion = getVersionNumberFromFileName($file);
        if (isVersionNumberGreater($serverFileVersion, $clientAppVersion)) {
            $latestVersionFileName = $file;
        }
    }
}


// function declarations in my php file (used in the forEach loop)
function getVersionNumberFromFileName($fileName) {
    // extract the version number with regEx replacement
    return preg_replace("/Finance D - Tenue de livres-darwin-(x64|arm64)-|\.zip/", "", $fileName);
}

function removeAllNonDigits($semanticVersionString) {
    // use regex replacement to keep only numeric values in the semantic version string
    return preg_replace("/\D+/", "", $semanticVersionString);
}

function isVersionNumberGreater($serverFileVersion, $clientFileVersion): bool {
    // receives two semantic versions (1.0.4) and compares their numeric value (104)
    // true when server version is greater than client version (105 > 104)
    return removeAllNonDigits($serverFileVersion) > removeAllNonDigits($clientFileVersion);
}

Using this manual comparison instead of a timestamp I can achieve a more surgical result. I hope this can give you some useful ideas if you have a similar requirement.

(PS: I took time to post because I was not satisfied with the answers I found relating to the specific requirement I had. Please be kind I'm also not very used to StackOverflow - Thanks!)

2
  • Thanks for sharing your solution, but as it doesn't answer the asker's question this might not be useful here. Also, anyone searching for a similar solution as your will have a hard time finding it among the answers. If you want to share a novel idea or solution, maybe try asking a question about the problem you solved and answering it yourself. This will help others facing the same problem easily find your solution through search. Jul 4, 2021 at 15:13
  • Thanks @SakibulAlam. Should I delete it from here? Jul 7, 2021 at 11:03

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