You could output the info from unix file command and parse it(assuming you can execute system commands, which is bad practice).
This is example of centos "file filename" output.
[rr@localhost images] (master)# file ui-anim_basic_16x16.gif
ui-anim_basic_16x16.gif: GIF image data, version 89a, 16 x 16
[rr@localhost images] (master)# file ui-icons_454545_256x240.png
ui-icons_454545_256x240.png: PNG image data, 256 x 240, 8-bit colormap, non-interlaced
[rr@localhost vendors] (master)# file jquery-validation-1.9.0.zip
jquery-validation-1.9.0.zip: Zip archive data, at least v1.0 to extract
also like other people suggested, you could read few bytes and check if they match signature.
for rar
Identifying characters Hex: 52 61 72 21 1A 07 00 , ASCII: Rar!
for zip
Identifying characters Hex: 50 4B 03 04 , ASCII: PK
Fileinfo
. Obviously, the more information you provide, the better answers you will get.