8

I have seen a code that converts integer into byte array. Below is the code on How to convert integer to byte array in php 3 (How to convert integer to byte array in php):

<?php

$i = 123456;
$ar = unpack("C*", pack("L", $i));

print_r($ar);
?>

The above code will output:

//output:
Array
(
   [1] => 64
   [2] => 226
   [3] => 1
   [4] => 0
)

But my problem right now is how to reverse this process. Meaning converting from byte array into integer. In the case above, the output will be 123456

Can anybody help me with this. I would be a great help. Thanks ahead.

3

3 Answers 3

11

Why not treat it like the math problem it is?

$i = ($ar[3]<<24) + ($ar[2]<<16) + ($ar[1]<<8) + $ar[0];
2
  • 1
    wow, this solve my problem but I change the code into: $i = ($ar[4]<<24) + ($ar[3]<<16) + ($ar[2]<<8) + ($ar[1]); since $ar[0] doesn't exist and when no parentheses is added between plus sign it will return 0 value. but thanks.
    – gchimuel
    Oct 2, 2012 at 3:37
  • @gchimuel The parentheses around last part $ar[0] is unnecessary, other parts is.
    – n0099
    Dec 23, 2022 at 14:19
5

Since L is four bytes long, you know the number of elements of the array. Therefore you can simply perform the operation is reverse:

$ar = [64,226,1,0];
$i = unpack("L",pack("C*",$ar[3],$ar[2],$ar[1],$ar[0]));
3
  • You can also do unpack('L', pack('C*', ...array_reverse($ar))) if you can ensure that $ar have 4 items and being indexed from 0 to 3.
    – n0099
    Dec 23, 2022 at 13:59
  • Also note the output of unpack('C*', $someBytesArray) will starts index from 1, so you should wrap array_values() on it.
    – n0099
    Dec 23, 2022 at 13:59
  • The meaning of array_reverse() or writing literal $ar[3], ..., $ar[0] is to convert byte order between big and small endian, if you can ensure the same endian is used through pack() to unpack(), you don't have to reverse them.
    – n0099
    Dec 23, 2022 at 14:23
4

In order to get a signed 4-byte value in PHP you need to do this:

    $temp = ($ar[0]<<24) + ($ar[1]<<16) + ($ar[2]<<8) + $ar[3];
    if($temp >= 2147483648)
         $temp -= 4294967296;
1
  • 1
    Worth to mention that this workaround is needed for x64 builds of PHP (except Windows ones). And there is one mistake in the code. The comparison must be greater or equal instead of just greater.
    – Denis V
    Oct 16, 2014 at 14:49

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