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Ok, so I have an index.php file which has to process many different file types. how do I guess the filetype based on the REQUEST_URI.

If I request http://site/image.jpg, and all requests redirect through index.php, which looks like this

<?php
   include('/www/site'.$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);
?>

How would I make that work correctly?

Should I test based on the extension of the file requested, or is there a way to get the filetype?

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2  
Can you rephrase your question? I am hoping you don't really run code like that on your website. – Till Sep 25 '08 at 19:47
1  
No, of course this isn't the way it actually works. That was just the best way to get the point across (so I thought). – Issac Kelly Sep 25 '08 at 23:35

8 Answers

up vote 33 down vote accepted

If you are sure you're only ever working with images, you can check out the getimagesize() PHP function, which attempts to return the image mime-type.

If you don't mind external dependencies, you can also check out the excellent getID3 library which can determine the mime-type of many different file types.

Lastly, you can check out the mime_content_type() function - but it has been deprecated for the Fileinfo PECL extension.

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10  
Instead of getimagesize(), call exif_imagetype() instead: us3.php.net/manual/en/function.exif-imagetype.php . It provides the same information without the performance penalty of doing other things. – Xiong Chiamiov Jan 16 '11 at 21:36

mime_content_type() is deprecated, so you won't be able to count on it working in the future. There is a "fileinfo" PECL extension, but I haven't heard good things about it.

If you are running on a *nix server, you can do the following, which has worked fine for me:

$file = escapeshellarg( $filename );
$mime = shell_exec("file -bi " . $file);
$filename should probably include the absolute path.
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i got very good results using a user function from http://php.net/manual/de/function.mime-content-type.php @''john dot howard at prismmg dot com 26-Oct-2009 03:43''

function get_mime_type($filename, $mimePath = '../etc') { ...

which doesnt use finfo, exec or deprecated function

works well also with remote ressources!

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function get_mime($file) {
  if (function_exists("finfo_file")) {
    $finfo = finfo_open(FILEINFO_MIME_TYPE); // return mime type ala mimetype extension
    $mime = finfo_file($finfo, $file);
    finfo_close($finfo);
    return $mime;
  } else if (function_exists("mime_content_type")) {
    return mime_content_type($file);
  } else if (!stristr(ini_get("disable_functions"), "shell_exec")) {
    // http://stackoverflow.com/a/134930/1593459
    $file = escapeshellarg($file);
    $mime = shell_exec("file -bi " . $file);
    return $mime;
  } else {
    return false;
  }
}

For me, nothing of this does work - mime_content_type is deprecated, finfo is not installed, and shell_exec is not allowed.

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According to the php manual, the finfo-file function is best way to do this. However, you will need to install the FileInfo PECL extension.

If the extension is not an option, you can use the outdated mime_content_type function.

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1  
Also. Fileinfo extension is enabled by default as of PHP 5.3 – Stann May 23 '11 at 18:02

I haven't used it, but there's a PECL extension for getting a file's mimetype. The official documentation for it is in the manual.

Depending on your purposes, a file extension can be ok, but it's not incredibly reliable since it's so easily changed.

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if you're only dealing with images you can use the [getimagesize()][1] function which contains all sorts of info about the image, including the type.

A more general approach would be to use the FileInfo extension from PECL. The PHP documentation for this extension can be found at: http://us.php.net/manual/en/ref.fileinfo.php

Some people have serious complaints about that extension... so if you run into serious issues or cannot install the extension for some reason you might wanna check out the depricated function mime_content_type()

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If you are working with Images only and you need mime type (e.g. for headers), then this is the fastest and most direct answer:

$file = 'path/to/image.jpg';
$image_mime = image_type_to_mime_type(exif_imagetype($file));

It will output true image mime type even if you rename your image file

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protected by Robert Harvey Dec 12 '12 at 19:06

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