161

I have this folder structure in my PHP project. (this is as shown in eclips)

-MySystem
    +Code
    +Data_Access
    -Public_HTML
        +css
        +js
        +Templates
    -resources

When I try this code

echo $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']

output is

D:/workspace

How can I get the path to RootDirectory of the system (MySystem), without hardcoding the Folder Name?

14 Answers 14

166

For PHP >= 5.3.0 try

PHP magic constants.

__DIR__

And make your path relative.

For PHP < 5.3.0 try

dirname(__FILE__)
7
  • 3
    this is just awesome, I tried $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'], dirname(), $_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME'] etc. but this worked excellently!
    – webblover
    Nov 26, 2014 at 16:40
  • 126
    It does depends where you use __DIR__ . It is relative to the file itself, so if in an include, inside a sub directory, it'll not return just your root directory.
    – Iris
    Jun 5, 2015 at 14:00
  • 36
    It will not give root directory
    – inrsaurabh
    Oct 20, 2017 at 12:06
  • 12
    quick note for anyone that stumbles across this answer looking for the answer of the asked question, DIR gets the directory of the current file not the project root unless you call it in a file that is in the project root, but as php doesn't have the concept of a project all paths have to be absolute or relative to the current location
    – MikeT
    Nov 12, 2019 at 14:47
  • 8
    Please do not upvote an answer that does not address correctly the question, just because it helped you.
    – ElYeante
    Jan 15, 2020 at 15:22
105

When you say that

$_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']

contains this path:

D:/workspace

Then D: is what you are looking for, isn't it? In that case you could explode the string by slashes and return the first one:

$pathInPieces = explode('/', $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']);
echo $pathInPieces[0];

This will output the server's root directory.

Update: When you use the constant DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR instead of the hardcoded slash ('/') this code is also working under Windows.

Update 2: The $_SERVER global variable is not always available. On command line (cli) for example. So you should use __DIR__ instead of $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']. __DIR__ returns the path of the php file itself.

3
  • 3
    And you could use __DIR__ instead of $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'].
    – Armin
    Dec 29, 2011 at 14:16
  • Sorry If I have not explained my question properly, What I actually need is 'D:/workspace/MySystem'
    – Nalaka526
    Dec 29, 2011 at 15:18
  • 1
    if your root directory path is in the form of /var/public/www" then using this method the first string in the array will be empty (0)/(1)/(2)/(3). the root will be the second string $pathInPieces[1]
    – tbradley22
    May 11, 2013 at 2:04
36

use the PHP function:

getcwd()

Gets the current working directory.

1
  • 14
    This returns CURRENT executing file path. Not root path Jun 8, 2020 at 13:49
14

I want to point to the way Wordpress handles this:

define( 'ABSPATH', dirname( __FILE__ ) . '/' );

As Wordpress is very heavy used all over the web and also works fine locally I have much trust in this method. You can find this definition on the bottom of your wordpress wp-config.php file

5
  • 1
    I guess this only works when you have two levels of directories. Right? I mean, when call it from base_project_directory/folder1/folder2/folder3/file.php it doesn't return the base_project_directory. Apr 12, 2019 at 15:03
  • "As Wordpress is very heavy used all over the web and also works fine locally I have much trust in this method." I don't believe this is a particularly good argument given the WP code quality and security track record. Sep 18, 2019 at 21:43
  • 2
    @AlexBarker I would contest the fact your implying that WP has a bad security track record. It's actually pretty secure and has a respinsive team focused on secuity - core has had very few exploited security issues in recent years (including as far back as when you commented). Jun 5, 2020 at 17:13
  • 1
    actually this doesn't work. Didn't investigate too much, but it looks like the double dirname actually strips a directory out (probably not what people who come to this thread want -> i.e. me)
    – 43matthew
    Aug 31, 2020 at 13:31
  • @43matthew You're right. Past then it worked this way but obviously not anymore. As WP also changed the definition I updated my answer accordingly. Thanks for pointing this out.
    – Hexodus
    Sep 1, 2020 at 13:15
11

At this moment, PHP itself does not provide a way to get the project's root directory for sure.

But you can implement a very simple method yourself that will do exactly what you're looking for.

Solution

Create a new file in your project, let say D:/workspace/MySystem/Code/FilesManager.php (use whatever name and path suit you the best). Then, use the following code:

<?php

class FilesManager
{
  public static function rootDirectory()
  {
    // Change the second parameter to suit your needs
    return dirname(__FILE__, 2);
  }
}

Now you can do this in, let's say D:/workspace/MySystem/Code/a/b/c/Feature.php:

echo FilesManager::rootDirectory();

And the expected result should be:

"D:/workspace/MySystem"

The output will be the same no matter where your "feature" file is located in the project.

Explanation

dirname is used to return the parent directory of the first parameter. We use the magic constant __FILE__ to give it FilesManager.php's path. The second parameter tells how many times to go up in the hierarchy. In this case, we need to do it twice, but it really depends where you put your file in the hierarchy. You can omit the second parameter if you only need to got up once, meaning the file is located in the root. But then, you can return __DIR__ directly instead.

This solution is guaranteed to work, no matter where the root is located on your server. Unless you end up moving the utility class somewhere else in the hierarchy.

Additional note

I'd avoid using DOCUMENT_ROOT for the following reasons (according to this answer):

  • It makes your application dependent on the server.
  • The Apache setup may give an incorrect path to the root directory.
2
  • 1
    the second argument for dirname helped a lot
    – amir22
    Jan 10, 2021 at 14:49
  • I tried your solution and it works on localhost , but when I used it on my host there are additional /\ added to the url , Apr 30, 2021 at 7:54
5
dirname(__FILE__)

is useful but will get the current path relative to the current file URL you in incase you are in other directory far from root like includes and you need get folder from the root you can use integer parameter 2 will go 1 level up and so on

echo dirname(__FILE__, 2);

before

C:\laragon\www\x\includes\reports\charts

after

C:\laragon\www\x\reports\charts

reports is folder inside the root directory x

3

you can try: $_SERVER['PATH_TRANSLATED']

quote:

Filesystem- (not document root-) based path to the current script, after the server has done any virtual-to-real mapping. Note: As of PHP 4.3.2, PATH_TRANSLATED is no longer set implicitly under the Apache 2 SAPI in contrast to the situation in Apache 1, where it's set to the same value as the SCRIPT_FILENAME server variable when it's not populated by Apache.
This change was made to comply with the CGI specification that PATH_TRANSLATED should only exist if PATH_INFO is defined. Apache 2 users may use AcceptPathInfo = On inside httpd.conf to define PATH_INFO

source: php.net/manual

3

You could also use realpath.

realpath(".") returns your document root.

You can call realpath with your specific path. Note that it will NOT work if the target folder or file does not exist. In such case it will return false, which could be useful for testing if a file exists.

In my case I needed to specify a path for a new file to be written to disk, and the solution was to append the path relative to document root:

$filepath = realpath(".") . "/path/to/newfile.txt";

Hope this helps anyone.

2
  • It works, and I think it's the best solution here. By reading the documentation, I'm not able to understand why and how it works. realpath() [...] resolves references to /./, /../ [...] and returns the canonicalized absolute pathname. Fine, but . means current directory, so if you pass it as parameter, how it's resolved to root' current directory? What I'm missing?
    – funder7
    Mar 11, 2022 at 19:55
  • I couldn't make this work. It shows C:/xampp/htdocs/shipping/styles.css in the devtools, but if I open it, it redirects to localhost/shipping/shipment-details.php/C:/xampp/htdocs/… which is totally unclear, why.
    – Dgloria
    Oct 9, 2022 at 6:31
2
echo $pathInPieces = explode(DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR , __FILE__);
echo $pathInPieces[0].DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR;
1

Summary

This example assumes you always know where the apache root folder is '/var/www/' and you are trying to find the next folder path (e.g. '/var/www/my_website_folder'). Also this works from a script or the web browser which is why there is additional code.

Code PHP7

function getHtmlRootFolder(string $root = '/var/www/') {

    // -- try to use DOCUMENT_ROOT first --
    $ret = str_replace(' ', '', $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']);
    $ret = rtrim($ret, '/') . '/';

    // -- if doesn't contain root path, find using this file's loc. path --
    if (!preg_match("#".$root."#", $ret)) {
      $root = rtrim($root, '/') . '/';
      $root_arr = explode("/", $root);
      $pwd_arr = explode("/", getcwd());
      $ret = $root . $pwd_arr[count($root_arr) - 1];
    }

    return (preg_match("#".$root."#", $ret)) ? rtrim($ret, '/') . '/' : null;
}

Example

echo getHtmlRootFolder();

Output:

/var/www/somedir/

Details:

Basically first tries to get DOCUMENT_ROOT if it contains '/var/www/' then use it, else get the current dir (which much exist inside the project) and gets the next path value based on count of the $root path. Note: added rtrim statements to ensure the path returns ending with a '/' in all cases . It doesn't check for it requiring to be larger than /var/www/ it can also return /var/www/ as a possible response.

0

This worked for me,

realpath("../")

you can use this ../ param to point. It will point to 1 step back to your actual working file

1
  • 3
    This will return path, 1-level up from the current file Jul 10, 2021 at 14:50
0

I've found the answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/24338828/7478226

<base href="http://localhost/abc/" />
0

I use this code. It allows for a user defined folder to be declared as $root on the first line. It then gets the actual root using __FILE__. This is exploded using DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR (so that it works on any system). A loop creates a new array of just the parts before the $root is found. $root is then pushed to the array. The new array is imploded using DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR again as the glue. The result is stored in a new global named REAL_ROOT.

Let me know if it is any help, or any good!

$root = 'folder_you_want_as_root';
$currentDirectory = __FILE__;
$parts = explode(DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR,__FILE__);
$newParts = [];
foreach($parts as $part){
    if($part==$root){
        break;
    }
    $newParts[] = $part;
}
$newParts[] = $root;
define('REAL_ROOT',implode(DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR,$newParts));
0

I'm share how i resolve this problem. Maybe helpful for you.

I'm create new file "my-config.php" in my root folder. And add this code inside.

<?php define( 'ABSPATH', dirname( __FILE__ ) . '/' );

And i'm use composer. (You can google it for this.) My composer(composer.json) like this (for this question).

{
"files": [
    "my-config.php"
  ]
}

And call autoloader.php in all file. Because, my config file calling automaticly thanks to autoloader.

<?php require  __DIR__ . "/vendor/autoload.php"; ?>

Now, since define is a constant that is defined once and cannot be changed again, ABSPATH will be determined as soon as my landing page loads and I will type ABSPATH whenever I want to use the root directory path.

Then i use everywhere "ABSPATH" for root path. For example i use xampp so my root path C://xampp/htdocs/


It works like this. Composer automatically loads the files and classes we write into composer.json. This is its intended use. Please ask google for more details.

Here, we have loaded the autoload.php and my-config.php file on the landing page. At this point, since our landing page will be located in the root directory, it will take the ABSPATH root directory path.

Of course, the root directory will be the path to the landing page. If your landing page is in another folder, then it will take the path of the folder it is in.

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