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I'm getting an "unexplainable" error on this line:

require_once "../Http/Request.php";

Error is failed to open stream, file doesn't exist.

The file is in a directory in the parent folder called "Http". The file is called "Request.php".

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.

At this point I have to rule out the possibility that the warning/fatal error is accurate and trying to figure out where the problem could be coming from.

Which steps do you suggest to start debugging this?

Google
   ¦_____ Auth
   ¦        ¦______ Abstract.php    (<- this is the file requiring Request.php)
   ¦
   ¦_____ Http
            ¦_____ Request.php     
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  • 1
    Hint: echo getcwd();
    – zerkms
    Jun 28, 2014 at 6:08
  • Where is the file that calls this code?
    – Cjmarkham
    Jun 28, 2014 at 6:09
  • Post some kind of tree folder
    – CMPS
    Jun 28, 2014 at 6:09
  • @Juicy is google the root folder ? If no, can you give me the full path starting from the root
    – CMPS
    Jun 28, 2014 at 6:20
  • try to use namespace. Jun 28, 2014 at 6:21

3 Answers 3

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The thing is that

require_once "../Http/Request.php";

includes the path relative to the current working directory. Which is not guaranteed to be equal to the current file directory.

What you presumably need is

require_once __DIR__ . "/Http/Request.php";
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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.

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First You have to check permission on this folder.

If folder has not read permission then give permission for execute and read.

to one level up from google directory structure and type

ls -ltr

First column of result is permission access for google folder and itmust be like

drwxr-xr-x

if not like this then You have to change this by folloing command:

chmod 755 Google

Hope this help.

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