I'm trying to create files with Unicode characters in there filenames. I don't quite know what encoding I should use, or if it's possible at all.

I have this file, saved in latin1 encoding:

$h = fopen("unicode_♫.txt", 'w');
fclose($h);

In UTF-8 this would decode as 'unicode_♫.txt'. It writes it in the latin1 version to the disk (which is obvious?). I need it to be save as it would appear with UTF-8 decoding. I've also tried encoding it with UTF-16 but that's not working either.

I'm using PHP 5.2, and would like this to work with NTFS, ext3 and ext4.

How can this be done?

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I have a silly question ... why? stackoverflow.com/questions/2050973/… – sdolgy Jun 24 '11 at 12:03
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I think the limiting factor is the operating system of your server. – Wesley van Opdorp Jun 24 '11 at 12:04
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2 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

It can't currently be done on Windows (possibly PHP 5.4 will support this scenario). In PHP, you can only write filenames using the Windows set codepage. If the codepage, does not include the character , you cannot use it. Worse, if you have a file on Windows with such character in its filename, you'll have trouble accessing it.

In Linux, at least with ext*, it's a different story. You can use whatever filenames you want, the OS doesn't care about the encoding. So if you consistently use filenames in UTF-8, you should be OK. UTF-16 is however excluded because filenames cannot include bytes with value 0.

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Filenames do not have a notion of encoding. You have to figure out the filename by other means. The only important point for your situation is that in most filesystems a filename is a null-terminated *byte*string, but in NTFS it is a null-terminated 16-bit-string. Consequently, you cannot use the standard fopen-type functions to access all possible NTFS filenames.

However, if you have obtained the NTFS filename of an existing file by other means, you can use the Windows API function GetShortPathName to obtain the short name of the file, which you can use in fopen. I don't know if PHP lets you access Windows API functions, though, but perhaps someone has written a module or plugin for that.

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