9

It's very odd,has anyone ever sum up with a conclusion yet?

Sometimes it checks the directory of the included file,too.

But sometimes not.

D:\test\1.php

<?php

include('sub\2.php');

D:\test\2.php

<?php

include('3.php');

Where 3.php is in the same dir as 2.php.

The above works,but why?The current directory should be D:\test,but it can still find 3.php,which is in D:\test\sub

More story(final)

About a year ago I met this problem,and then I ended up fixed it with the hardcoding like below:

Common.php:

if (file_exists("../../../Common/PHP/Config.inc"))
    include('../../../Common/PHP/Config.inc');

if (file_exists("../../Common/PHP/Config.inc"))
    include('../../Common/PHP/Config.inc');

if (file_exists("../Common/PHP/Config.inc"))
    include('../Common/PHP/Config.inc');

if (file_exists("Common/PHP/Config.inc"))
    include('Common/PHP/Config.inc');

Where Config.inc is in the same directory as Common.php

4
  • 1
    Good question! I can confirm this on Windows and Linux. I have no idea why this is.
    – Pekka
    Mar 13, 2010 at 12:03
  • Regarding your last example, if "Config.inc" is in the same directory as "Common.php" then this could be simplified to include(dirname(__FILE__).'/Config.inc'); - this will always work, regardless of the include_path and which file "Common.php" is included into. If there is no chance "Config.inc" could be found in the include_path (in which the current directory is often included) then you could simply call include 'Config.inc';, although this is possibly less efficient since the include_path is first searched (which fails).
    – MrWhite
    Feb 10, 2015 at 17:55
  • In your first example, I assume "D:\test\2.php" should be "D:\test\sub\2.php"? (Otherwise include('sub\2.php'); would never work.)
    – MrWhite
    Feb 10, 2015 at 17:58
  • I just experienced what you describe. I've always included files without the path, inside my included file (where both files exist in the same sub directory) and I have this working on multiple servers. On Friday, on one server, this suddenly stopped working. I now have to specify the path in the include, or it won't find it. I have no idea why. Exact same versions of PHP on all servers. If you ever figured this out, I'd love to get an update on your story.
    – Vincent
    Feb 9, 2020 at 20:54

3 Answers 3

2

If you take a look at the source code for php in main/fopen_wrappers.c you will find

/* check in calling scripts' current working directory as a fall back case
     */
    if (zend_is_executing(TSRMLS_C)) {
        char *exec_fname = zend_get_executed_filename(TSRMLS_C);
        int exec_fname_length = strlen(exec_fname);

        while ((--exec_fname_length >= 0) && !IS_SLASH(exec_fname[exec_fname_length]));
        if (exec_fname && exec_fname[0] != '[' &&
            exec_fname_length > 0 &&
            exec_fname_length + 1 + filename_length + 1 < MAXPATHLEN) {
            memcpy(trypath, exec_fname, exec_fname_length + 1);
            memcpy(trypath+exec_fname_length + 1, filename, filename_length+1);
            actual_path = trypath;

This seems to be executed unconditionally and therefore will always make a file in the same path as the including/file-opening script accessible ...as the last choice after all possibilities specified in include_path. And only if you do not define a relative or absolute path in the include().

15
  • I dont seem to understand this code,are there some clues why sometimes it doesn't check the directory of the included file?
    – user198729
    Mar 13, 2010 at 13:45
  • For 3.php it first tests all locations given in the include_path. A relative path given there, e.g. include_path=.;..;lalala would be relative to the current working directory (which is not changed by an include()). Only the last (additional) option is to look in the same directory as the including file is in. It "takes" the first 3.php it can find. Is that your problem: php grabs another 3.php as you'd expect? Your other questions seem to indicate that...
    – VolkerK
    Mar 13, 2010 at 13:50
  • My problem is sometimes it won't find 3.php,but I can't reproduce it easily.But it's in the same directory as the including file is in.Maybe when the include is in a function/method,I guess...
    – user198729
    Mar 13, 2010 at 13:58
  • So, for clarification: It doesn't find any 3.php in that case (not simply the "wrong" one but none at all). You can't reproduce it easily... hm. Does it happen on different servers/versions/configurations? Or is it like a heisenbug that happens on the same machine with the same code without touching anything that seems to be related?
    – VolkerK
    Mar 13, 2010 at 14:04
  • Yes.It happens on different servers,I don't think it's a heisenbug
    – user198729
    Mar 13, 2010 at 14:09
1

It checks in the current path, and the directories listed in include_path.

You can run a phpinfo() to see your include path.

4
  • This doesn't explain the problem I described:(
    – user198729
    Mar 13, 2010 at 11:44
  • @user as far as I know, that's all there is to it. Please show some examples of when files get loaded, and when they don't.
    – Pekka
    Mar 13, 2010 at 11:46
  • Will getcwd() change during a request if we don't explicitly change it(like chdir()).I'll give an example soon.
    – user198729
    Mar 13, 2010 at 11:51
  • If by "current path" you mean the current working directory then it only checks the CWD if it's included as part of the include_path (which it is by default). However, if by "current path" you mean the directory that contains the script (ie. dirname(__FILE__) - which has the include statement and is not necessarily the same as the CWD) then this is only checked after it fails to find it in the include_path.
    – MrWhite
    Feb 10, 2015 at 19:22
1

Sometimes directory of the included file being current working directory and sometimes not
Current directory can be checked with getcwd()

0

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