I can access it directly by typing the absolute path into my browser,
so I can confirm it is indeed uploaded to my server, in the correct
folder.
Here’s your problem: You are conflating browser URL path to server file path. And since you say you can access it directly via your browser, then it’s not a file system permissions issue since the web server itself can read the file.
So instead I am going to chalk this up to headache inducing relative path issues. So I would recommend getting rid of this:
require_once "../Http/Request.php";
And instead just set a base path manually in a config file & don’t worry about it—relative paths—ever again.
So as far as a file base path goes, you should explicitly set a $BASE_PATH
like this:
$BASE_PATH = '/full/path/to/your/codebase/here/';
If you don’t know what your file system base path is, just place this line of code in your PHP code; like index.php
:
echo "Your path is: " . realpath(dirname(__FILE__)) . "<br />";
Then load that page. Somewhere near the top will be this text:
Your path is: /full/path/to/your/codebase/here/
Then with that set you can change your code to be something like this:
And then set your require_once
like this:
require_once $BASE_PATH . "Http/Request.php";
Some might say you should use $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']
or even dirname(__FILE__)
directly with the implication being that you can simplify code portability that way. But the way file paths are set for installs can vary so it just never works well & the chances of you getting snagged on an odd server quirk is high.
It’s always best to just to manually set a $BASE_PATH
in a config file when you move code than deal with the headaches caused by PHP constants like $_SERVER
not being consistent between installs, setups & configurations.
echo getcwd();