14

The closest I've seen in the PHP docs, is to fread() a given length, but that doesnt specify which line to start from. Any other suggestions?

0

7 Answers 7

38

Yes, you can do that easily with SplFileObject::seek

$file = new SplFileObject('filename.txt');
$file->seek(1000);
for($i = 0; !$file->eof() && $i < 1000; $i++) {
    echo $file->current(); 
    $file->next();
}

This is a method from the SeekableIterator interface and not to be confused with fseek.

And because SplFileObject is iterable you can do it even easier with a LimitIterator:

$file = new SplFileObject('longFile.txt');
$fileIterator = new LimitIterator($file, 1000, 2000);
foreach($fileIterator as $line) {
    echo $line, PHP_EOL;
}

Again, this is zero-based, so it's line 1001 to 2001.

2
  • 2
    +1 SPL is very nice and could use more advertisement (and documentation) May 11, 2010 at 9:00
  • 4
    Just remember that the SPL implementation is implemented in the same manner as the first suggested solution. It will start reading the file from the first byte, one line at a time, and leave the file pointer at the desired line. There is no way to get around that issue.
    – MatsLindh
    May 11, 2010 at 11:20
14

You not going to be able to read starting from line X because lines can be of arbitrary length. So you will have to read from the start counting the number of lines read to get to line X. For example:

<?php
$f = fopen('sample.txt', 'r');
$lineNo = 0;
$startLine = 3;
$endLine = 6;
while ($line = fgets($f)) {
    $lineNo++;
    if ($lineNo >= $startLine) {
        echo $line;
    }
    if ($lineNo == $endLine) {
        break;
    }
}
fclose($f);
9
  • Or you could just use file() and array_slice(), as in my answer :) Feb 5, 2009 at 5:45
  • 1
    Yeah except that reads the whole file. This code only reads the minimum required.
    – grom
    Feb 5, 2009 at 5:51
  • will that work even the file is so huge like the one i currently need to work on is 25MB?
    – lock
    Feb 5, 2009 at 5:53
  • @lock, yes it should. The example I gave only ever has one line in memory. You can store the lines into an array as long as don't have too many. Having said that 25Mb is not huge compared to some log files I have had to process.
    – grom
    Feb 5, 2009 at 6:33
  • 1
    If you are running into memory problems with long running scripts and lower versions of PHP it is best to avoid objects as much as possible which is why I prefer the answer by @grom
    – im3r3k
    Nov 26, 2013 at 21:23
3

Unfortunately, in order to be able to read from line x to line y, you'd need to be able to detect line breaks... and you'd have to scan through the whole file. However, assuming you're not asking about this for performance reasons, you can get lines x to y with the following:

$x = 10; //inclusive start line
$y = 20; //inclusive end line
$lines = file('myfile.txt');
$my_important_lines = array_slice($lines, $x, $y);

See: array_slice

1
  • You should note that the array starts with 0 and line numbering usually starts with 1. So there should be a $x-1, $y-1 or remember $x=10 is really $x=11.
    – null
    Feb 5, 2009 at 16:22
3

Well, you can't use function fseek to seek the appropriate position because it works with given number of bytes.

I think that it's not possible without some sort of cache or going through lines one after the other.

3
  • 4
    What about a line cache? Store somewhere the byte positions of each line, then use fseek() to get to them. May 11, 2010 at 6:57
  • @christian studer: You're talking about Indexing a file? This could be an interesting solution if the file was static and wouldn't change most of the time. Unfortunately, the files I'm going to read are source-code files still in development, so indexing is out of the question.
    – thedp
    May 11, 2010 at 8:31
  • 1
    Yes, indexing it and cache the index. (The timestamp on the file might give an indication if the cached index is still valid). PHP is surprisingly fast for these tasks, and if you have several requests for the same file before it changes again, might be fast enough to pull this off. May 11, 2010 at 9:04
2

Here is the possible solution :)

<?php
$f = fopen('sample.txt', 'r');
$lineNo = 0;
$startLine = 3;
$endLine = 6;
while ($line = fgets($f)) {
    $lineNo++;
    if ($lineNo >= $startLine) {
        echo $line;
    }
    if ($lineNo == $endLine) {
        break;
    }
}
fclose($f);
?>
9
  • 2
    But it reads all lines before X. The question is asking if this part can be skipped, isn't it?
    – MartyIX
    May 11, 2010 at 6:56
  • See the $startLine and $endLine variables, it will read only those lines.
    – Sarfraz
    May 11, 2010 at 6:57
  • 1
    The question is not about processing only given lines (>=startLine && <= endLine). It's about minimalizing the number of reading operation on disk.
    – MartyIX
    May 11, 2010 at 7:16
  • It's a nice solution, but still time consuming. The deeper you go into a file the longer it will take... And I intend to work with files that have 10,000+ lines.
    – thedp
    May 11, 2010 at 7:22
  • @thedp: let's see if there is a better solution :)
    – Sarfraz
    May 11, 2010 at 7:25
0

If you're looking for lines then you can't use fread because that relies on a byte offset, not the number of line breaks. You actually have to read the file to find the line breaks, so a different function is more appropriate. fgets will read the file line-by-line. Throw that in a loop and capture only the lines you want.

0

I was afraid of that... I guess it's plan B then :S

For each AJAX request I'm going to:

  1. Read into a string the number of lines I'm going to return to the client.
  2. Copy the rest of the file into a temp file.
  3. Return string to the client.

It's lame, and it will probably be pretty slow with 10,000+ lines files, but I guess it's better than reading the same over and over again, at least the temp file is getting shorter with every request... No?

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