23

I've seen many questions about how to efficiently use PHP to download files rather than allowing direct HTTP requests (to keep files secure, to track downloads, etc.).

The answer is almost always PHP readfile().

BUT, although it works great during testing with huge files, when it's on a live site with hundreds of users, downloads start to hang and PHP memory limits are exhausted.

So what is it about how readfile() works that causes memory to blow up so bad when traffic is high? I thought it's supposed to bypass heavy use of PHP memory by writing directly to the output buffer?

EDIT: (To clarify, I'm looking for a "why", not "what can I do". I think that Apache's mod_xsendfile is the best way to circumvent)

2
  • 1
    Do you have PHP output buffering on (via ob_start())? If so, PHP's going to catch the file contents and cause memory issues.
    – ceejayoz
    Jul 8, 2011 at 17:27
  • 1
    Using the example on the linked PHP doc, I don't -- I have ob_clean(); flush(); readfile($file);
    – tmsimont
    Jul 8, 2011 at 17:29

6 Answers 6

6
Description
int readfile ( string $filename [, bool $use_include_path = false [, resource $context ]] )
Reads a file and writes it to the output buffer*.

PHP has to read the file and it writes to the output buffer. So, for 300Mb file, no matter what the implementation you wrote (by many small segments, or by 1 big chunk) PHP has to read through 300Mb of file eventually.

If multiple user has to download the file, there will be a problem. (In one server, hosting providers will limit memory given to each hosting user. With such limited memory, using buffer is not going to be a good idea. )

I think using the direct link to download a file is a much better approach for big files.

5
  • So if PHP is "writing to the output buffer" for UserA -- it's using memory that is then unavailable to UserB and UserC? Leading to an eventual overuse of memory?
    – tmsimont
    Jul 8, 2011 at 17:33
  • Yes. Since PHP does not know when the other user is gonna download the same file, PHP will just read the file to buffer and write them to a requester as soon as possible... If 100 users request the same 10MB file, the memory usage will likely be 1000MB.
    – user482594
    Jul 8, 2011 at 17:49
  • makes sense to me... so readfile() doesn't quite do the trick, and should be avoided in high traffic situations. thanks.
    – tmsimont
    Jul 8, 2011 at 17:53
  • your answer indicates this problem exists even when buffering small segments. In that particular case, your 100 users requesting 10MB file would NOT result in 1000MB of memory usage, but 100 x buffer size. Correct?
    – horatio
    Jul 8, 2011 at 18:29
  • Yeah that is right, I was saying that the 'total' memory usage used up will be 1000MB at the end. At certain moment, it will be 100 * buffer_size
    – user482594
    Jul 8, 2011 at 18:44
3

If you have output buffering on than use ob_end_flush() right before the call to readfile()

header(...);
ob_end_flush();
@readfile($file);
2
  • I tried adding this before doing readfile on a 2GB file, but it still went over the memory limit
    – NDM
    Mar 29, 2013 at 15:41
  • As mentioned above, output buffering is not the problem.
    – reggie
    Jun 9, 2013 at 11:56
3

As mentioned here: "Allowed memory .. exhausted" when using readfile, the following block of code at the top of the php file did the trick for me.

This will checks if php output buffering is active. If so it turns it off.

if (ob_get_level()) {
    ob_end_clean();
}
2
  • Since the question is "why", I think you should provide an explanation rather than a fix. After all, you're basically copying an existing answer. Aug 17, 2016 at 7:24
  • Ah yes. I went ahead and added a short explanation. Aug 18, 2016 at 2:48
1

You might want to turn off output buffering altogether for that particular location, using PHP's output_buffering configuration directive.

Apache example:

<Directory "/your/downloadable/files">
     ...
     php_admin_value output_buffering "0"
     ...
</Directory>

"Off" as the value seems to work as well, while it really should throw an error. At least according to how other types are converted to booleans in PHP. *shrugs*

1

Came up with this idea in the past (as part of my library) to avoid high memory usage:

function suTunnelStream( $sUrl, $sMimeType, $sCharType = null )
{
  $f = @fopen( $sUrl, 'rb' );
  if( $f === false )
   { return false; }

  $b = false;
  $u = true;

  while( $u !== false && !feof($f ))
  { 
    $u = @fread( $f, 1024 );
    if( $u !== false )
    {  
      if( !$b )
       { $b = true;
         suClearOutputBuffers();
         suCachedHeader( 0, $sMimeType, $sCharType, null, !suIsValidString($sCharType)?('content-disposition: attachment; filename="'.suUniqueId($sUrl).'"'):null );
       } 
      echo $u; 
    }
 } 

  @fclose( $f );
  return ( $b && $u !== false );
}

Maybe this can give you some inspiration.

0

Well, it is memory intensive function. I would pipe users to a static server that has specific rule set in place to control downloads instead of using readfile().

If that's not an option add more RAM to satisfy the load or introduce queuing system that gracefully controls server usage.

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