6

I need to require_once a file that is located in my sites root directory. The problem I have is that I won't always know how many levels up the root directory is from where my current script is running. So I need to figure out how many directory levels I need to go up to require_once my file.

Some times it could be:

require_once '../../file.php';

And some times it could be:

require_once '../file.php';

Or any other number of directory levels up.

How can I calculate how many "../" I need to get to the root directory from any location in a sub directory?

7 Answers 7

5

Create a constant SITE_ROOT in your index.php and use it everywhere you need to specify the path, like:

require_once SITE_ROOT . '/path/from/siteroot/to/file.ext';
5

Here's a simple way that I figured out:

// get current file location
$pieces = explode("/", $_SERVER['PHP_SELF']);

// subtract 1 for left / and 1 for current file
$loop = count($pieces) - 2;

// loop until to root directory
for ($i=0; $i<$loop; $i++) {
    $up_dirs .= "../";
}

Probably not as efficient as some of the other suggestions. But I tested it and it works.

2
  • This helped me. Thanks! Oct 10, 2017 at 11:42
  • i use this style in a function to have this usage through out. Works for all I need it to which is a lot.
    – JSG
    Jul 11, 2018 at 19:39
1

You can use dirname(__FILE__) to be sure that it's always the directory your include file lies

1
  • @zerkms: I didnt want to be striked with downvotes because "it was added in PHP 3..)"
    – genesis
    Oct 8, 2011 at 0:04
1

You can get the site's document root with $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'], and assuming that nothing in your code has changed the current working directory, you can retrieve that with getcwd(). With those two paths, then use the code in this comment to calculate the difference.

4
  • Even though this advice is often I cannot agree with it. Projects often contain a lot of files above docroot
    – zerkms
    Oct 8, 2011 at 0:00
  • @zerkms The OP did say "site's root directory." I interpret this as the document root. Oct 8, 2011 at 1:22
  • @PhpMyCoder: hehe, indeed subjective. I interpret this as "the application root" which doesn't equal to docroot :-S
    – zerkms
    Oct 8, 2011 at 1:28
  • @zerkms Agreed. I personally use your solution, but I thought this answer could fit the needs of the OP. Oct 8, 2011 at 1:31
1

There are multiple options. But you'll have to decide which is appropriate in your case:

  • spl_autoload
  • set_include_path
  • Relative path traversal with include(dirname(__FILE__)."/file.php");
  • Server-root related paths with include("$_SERVER[DOCUMENT_ROOT]/file.php");

For applications a pre-defined root directory is the way to go. For libraries it's likewise the preferred approach.

0
0

getcwd() will return the current working directory string.

0

You can specify the path from the top instead, for example

"/my/user/dir/file.php"

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