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Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 33554432 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 12288 bytes).

Thats the error i get when i try to upload a image on around 2,94 mb.

When i upload a image on 100kb and so it works fine. Why is this?

How can i make a restriction, so if you upload over xx bytes then you will get error that its too big, so i dont get that fatal error.

i started doing this at the form

$max_file_size = 8388608; 
<input type="hidden" name="MAX_FILE_SIZE" value="<?php echo $max_file_size ?>">

Here's my file upload:

<?php  
include "dbc.php";

$directory_self = str_replace(basename($_SERVER['PHP_SELF']), '', $_SERVER['PHP_SELF']);

$uploadsDirectory = $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] . $directory_self . 'images/profilePhoto/';

$uploadForm = 'http://' . $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] . $directory_self . 'editProfile.php';

$uploadSuccess = 'http://' . $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] . $directory_self . 'home.php';

$fieldname = 'file';


// possible PHP upload errors
$errors = array(1 => 'php.ini max file size exceeded', 
                2 => 'html form max file size exceeded', 
                3 => 'file upload was only partial', 
                4 => 'no file was attached');

// check the upload form was actually submitted else print form
isset($_POST['submit'])
    or error('You need to upload a profilephoto, no?', $uploadForm);

// check for standard uploading errors
($_FILES[$fieldname]['error'] == 0)
    or error($errors[$_FILES[$fieldname]['error']], $uploadForm);

// check that the file we are working on really was an HTTP upload
@is_uploaded_file($_FILES[$fieldname]['tmp_name'])
    or error('not an HTTP upload', $uploadForm);

// validation... since this is an image upload script we 
// should run a check to make sure the upload is an image
@getimagesize($_FILES[$fieldname]['tmp_name'])
    or error('only image uploads are allowed', $uploadForm);

// make a unique filename for the uploaded file and check it is 
// not taken... if it is keep trying until we find a vacant one
$now = time();
while(file_exists($uploadFilename = $uploadsDirectory.$now.'-'.$_FILES[$fieldname]['name']))
{
    $now++;
}

// now let's move the file to its final and allocate it with the new filename
makeThumbnail($_FILES[$fieldname],  122, 160, $v[id]); 
@move_uploaded_file($_FILES[$fieldname]['tmp_name'], $uploadFilename)
    or error('receiving directory insuffiecient permission', $uploadForm);
$filnamn =  $now.'-'.$_FILES[$fieldname]['name'];
    mysql_query("UPDATE users_profile SET photo = '$filnamn' WHERE uID = '$v[id]'") or die(mysql_error());
// If you got this far, everything has worked and the file has been successfully saved.
// We are now going to redirect the client to the success page.
echo "Du har nu bytt profillbild!";
// make an error handler which will be used if the upload fails
function error($error, $location, $seconds = 5)
{
    header("Refresh: $seconds; URL=\"$location\"");
    echo '<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"'."\n".
    '"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">'."\n\n".
    '<html lang="en">'."\n".
    '   <head>'."\n".
    '       <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">'."\n\n".
    '       <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="stylesheet.css">'."\n\n".
    '   <title>Upload error</title>'."\n\n".
    '   </head>'."\n\n".
    '   <body>'."\n\n".
    '   <div id="Upload">'."\n\n".
    '       <h1>Upload failure</h1>'."\n\n".
    '       <p>An error has occured: '."\n\n".
    '       <span class="red">' . $error . '...</span>'."\n\n".
    '       The upload form is reloading</p>'."\n\n".
    '    </div>'."\n\n".
    '</html>';
    exit;
} // end error handler
?>

MakeThumbnail function()

function makeThumbnail($file, $thumbSizeWidth, $thumbSizeHeight, $user) {
    if ($file['error'] !== UPLOAD_ERR_OK) {

        // something blew up
        // so handle error condition
        // 
        // error codes documentation: http://php.net/manual/en/features.file-upload.errors.php
        die();
    }

    $path_thumbs = "images/profilePhoto/thumbs/";
    $allowed_types = array('image/jpeg', 'image/jpg', 'image/bmp', 'image/png', 'image/gif');

    $imageinfo = getimagesize($file['tmp_name']); // get image info
list($width, $height, $type, $attr) = $imageinfo;

    if ($imageinfo === FALSE) {
        die("Uhoh. Unable to read uploaded file");
    }

    if (!in_array($imageinfo['mime'], $allowed_types)) {
        die("Sorry, images of type {$imageinfo['mime']} not allowed");
    }

    $rand_name = rand(0, 999999999); // this isn't particularly well done, but ...

    // create thumbnail
    switch($imageinfo['mime']) {
        case 'image/jpeg':
        case 'image/jpg':
            $new_img = imagecreatefromjpeg($file['tmp_name']);
            $file_ext = '.jpg';
            break;
        case 'image/gif':
            $new_img = imagecreatefromgif($file['tmp_name']);
            $file_ext = '.gif';
            break;
        case 'image/png':
            $new_img = imagecreatefrompng($file['tmp_name']);
            $file_ext = '.png';
            break;
        default:
            die("Uhoh. How did we get here? Unsupported image type");
    }

    $imgratio = $height / $width;


        $newwidth = $thumbSizeWidth;
        $newheight = $thumbSizeHeight;

    $resized_img = imagecreatetruecolor($newwidth, $newheight);
    imagecopyresampled($resized_img, $new_img, 0, 0, 0, 0, $newwidth, $newheight, $width, $height);

    $thumb_name = $rand_name . $file_ext;
    $thumb_path = $path_thumbs . '/' . $rand_name . $file_ext;
    imagejpeg($resized_img, $thumb_path);

mysql_query("UPDATE users_profile SET photo_thumb = '$thumb_name' WHERE uID = '$user'") or die(mysql_error());

    imagedestroy($resized_img);
    imagedestroy($new_img);

    return($thumb_name);
}
18
  • 2
    stackoverflow.com/questions/2772198/… is one of many posts that are asking the same problem
    – DrColossos
    Sep 2, 2010 at 10:04
  • Please show some actual PHP code and what you are doing with the file upload.
    – Pekka
    Sep 2, 2010 at 10:05
  • 1
    @Col. Shrapnel If the OP is hitting a memory usage limit, and the makeThumbnail function is doing the memory intensive work then it makes sense to be able to see it, no?
    – Simon
    Sep 2, 2010 at 10:20
  • 1
    possible duplicate of PHp - memory error when resizing a PNG image
    – Pekka
    Sep 2, 2010 at 10:24
  • 1
    Because it's not the size on disk that dictates how much memory is required when processing the image with GD. It is the physical dimensions (i.e number of pixels) that will have the largest impact when creating the thumbnail.
    – Simon
    Sep 2, 2010 at 10:36

2 Answers 2

5

It sounds like it's the overall memory_limit, not the upload limit. Are you processing the image once uploaded with GD?

If so, this will be much more memory intensive on larger images if you're doing a lot of post processing on the uploads - in this case try upping the memory limit, if you're doing something much more straight forward then there is probably another cause for the large memory usage...

1
  • Why the down vote? Looking at the comments in the question, this appears to have been the correct solution and fixed the OP's issue?
    – Simon
    Sep 2, 2010 at 10:42
0

very simple Create a file called "php.ini" in the "wp-admin" folder of wordpress install.

Add the following text to the file:

memory_limit = 256M ;

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