The first step is to try and determine the image type, which you can do with exif_imagetype
, example:
$valid_types = array('jpeg','jpg','gif','png');
if (($type = exif_imagetype($_FILES['image']['tmp_name'])) &&
in_array(ltrim(image_type_to_extension($type), '.'), $valid_types)) {
// image appears to be valid
For further security, you should upload the file to a folder that is not accessible via the browser, and also rename the image. for example:
$upload_path = '/path/to/uploads'; // folder ABOVE www or public_html
$hash = hash_file('sha1', $_FILES['image']['tmp_name']);
$ext = image_type_to_extension($type);
$fname = $hash . $ext;
// save it
if (move_uploaded_file($_FILES['image']['tmp_name'], "$upload_path/$fname")) {
// image was saved
Or, rather than using move_uploaded_file
you could attempt to redraw it with the GD library or Imagick and only save the redrawn copy. It is likely if the image contains any errors then those libraries will fail to draw it.
That should be secure enough. Even if a user did manage to exploit some vulnerability they would have no way of executing it unless you're feeding it back to them in a predictable way, but it's still very unlikely.