407

I want to create a directory if it does not exist already.

Is using the is_dir function enough for that purpose?

if ( !is_dir( $dir ) ) {
    mkdir( $dir );       
}

Or should I combine is_dir with file_exists?

if ( !file_exists( $dir ) && !is_dir( $dir ) ) {
    mkdir( $dir );       
} 
5
  • 19
    @IvoRenkema PHP also supports or/and besides ||/&&. Apr 19, 2013 at 18:48
  • 2
    Operator && is unuseful here, because, if file doesn't exist (!file_exists($dir) == true), for sure it is not a directory. And if file exists, !is_dir($dir) will not be checked, because !file_exists($dir) will return false and && operator is short-circuit. Mar 8, 2016 at 10:05
  • 6
    In my view, the operator should be OR.
    – Mojtaba
    Aug 29, 2016 at 17:20
  • with && this works perfectly for me
    – FABBRj
    Feb 4, 2020 at 11:50
  • 4
    It should be if ( !file_exists( $dir ) || !is_dir( $dir) ) { mkdir($dir); } If you put &&, will not create the directory if has a file with the same name of directory.
    – lipinf
    Sep 23, 2020 at 19:35

12 Answers 12

267

Both would return true on Unix systems - in Unix everything is a file, including directories. But to test if that name is taken, you should check both. There might be a regular file named 'foo', which would prevent you from creating a directory name 'foo'.

4
  • 42
    dont forget to check if is_writable also
    – Drewdin
    Mar 24, 2011 at 21:46
  • 10
    @Drewdin you'd want to check the parent for is_writable wouldn't you? Mar 24, 2011 at 22:36
  • Can you provide a brief code snippet example? It would be very helpful and much appreciated. Apr 27, 2022 at 2:17
  • Could you clarify why file_exists may be useful? It seems that checking is_dir should be enough
    – YakovL
    Jan 24, 2023 at 9:03
160
$filename = "/folder/" . $dirname . "/";

if (file_exists($filename)) {
    echo "The directory $dirname exists.";
} else {
    mkdir("folder/" . $dirname, 0755);
    echo "The directory $dirname was successfully created.";
    exit;
}
6
  • 15
    considering it takes post input and uses it as-is, plus makes 0777 dir, prolly not that safe at all ;P
    – sEver
    Aug 20, 2013 at 16:45
  • 2
    More seriously, $dirname could be sanitized and permission could be set to 0755. Add to that some .htaccess directives. There's some further recommendations over at OWASP: owasp.org
    – James P.
    Aug 24, 2013 at 5:21
  • # The following directives force the content-type application/octet-stream # and force browsers to display a download dialog for non-image files. # This prevents the execution of script files in the context of the website: #ForceType application/octet-stream Header set Content-Disposition attachment <FilesMatch "(?i)\.(gif|jpe?g|png)$"> ForceType none Header unset Content-Disposition </FilesMatch> # The following directive prevents browsers from MIME-sniffing the content-type. # This is an important complement to the ForceType directive above: Header set X-Content-Type-Options nosniff
    – James P.
    Aug 24, 2013 at 5:23
  • 766 i think will be ok for a public folder since anyone can access and write but noone can delete
    – themhz
    Nov 20, 2013 at 14:56
  • 10
    When you use mkdir - why didn't you just pass '$filename'? Jan 14, 2014 at 19:06
26

I think realpath() may be the best way to validate if a path exist http://www.php.net/realpath

Here is an example function:

<?php
/**
 * Checks if a folder exist and return canonicalized absolute pathname (long version)
 * @param string $folder the path being checked.
 * @return mixed returns the canonicalized absolute pathname on success otherwise FALSE is returned
 */
function folder_exist($folder)
{
    // Get canonicalized absolute pathname
    $path = realpath($folder);

    // If it exist, check if it's a directory
    if($path !== false AND is_dir($path))
    {
        // Return canonicalized absolute pathname
        return $path;
    }

    // Path/folder does not exist
    return false;
}

Short version of the same function

<?php
/**
 * Checks if a folder exist and return canonicalized absolute pathname (sort version)
 * @param string $folder the path being checked.
 * @return mixed returns the canonicalized absolute pathname on success otherwise FALSE is returned
 */
function folder_exist($folder)
{
    // Get canonicalized absolute pathname
    $path = realpath($folder);

    // If it exist, check if it's a directory
    return ($path !== false AND is_dir($path)) ? $path : false;
}

Output examples

<?php
/** CASE 1 **/
$input = '/some/path/which/does/not/exist';
var_dump($input);               // string(31) "/some/path/which/does/not/exist"
$output = folder_exist($input);
var_dump($output);              // bool(false)

/** CASE 2 **/
$input = '/home';
var_dump($input);
$output = folder_exist($input);         // string(5) "/home"
var_dump($output);              // string(5) "/home"

/** CASE 3 **/
$input = '/home/..';
var_dump($input);               // string(8) "/home/.."
$output = folder_exist($input);
var_dump($output);              // string(1) "/"

Usage

<?php

$folder = '/foo/bar';

if(FALSE !== ($path = folder_exist($folder)))
{
    die('Folder ' . $path . ' already exist');
}

mkdir($folder);
// Continue do stuff
2
  • 2
    For anyone who comes across this, I believe that realpath caches folders when it runs, so if it's run once, then the folder is removed after that, it may not return false if run again.
    – Jase
    Nov 29, 2015 at 3:12
  • 2
    so does file_exists though
    – Sebas
    Feb 10, 2016 at 4:12
7

Second variant in question post is not ok, because, if you already have file with the same name, but it is not a directory, !file_exists($dir) will return false, folder will not be created, so error "failed to open stream: No such file or directory" will be occured. In Windows there is a difference between 'file' and 'folder' types, so need to use file_exists() and is_dir() at the same time, for ex.:

if (file_exists('file')) {
    if (!is_dir('file')) { //if file is already present, but it's not a dir
        //do something with file - delete, rename, etc.
        unlink('file'); //for example
        mkdir('file', NEEDED_ACCESS_LEVEL);
    }
} else { //no file exists with this name
    mkdir('file', NEEDED_ACCESS_LEVEL);
}
5

I had the same doubt, but see the PHP docu:

https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.file-exists.php

https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.is-dir.php

You will see that is_dir() has both properties.

Return Values is_dir Returns TRUE if the filename exists and is a directory, FALSE otherwise.

3
$year = date("Y");   
$month = date("m");   
$filename = "../".$year;   
$filename2 = "../".$year."/".$month;

if(file_exists($filename)){
    if(file_exists($filename2)==false){
        mkdir($filename2,0777);
    }
}else{
    mkdir($filename,0777);
}
2
  • 1
    You can check on the full path and if it doesn't exist create it with mkdir recursive: if (!file_exists($filename2)) { mkdir($filename2, 0777, true); } Also, you're code will never create the full path if $filename doesn't exist...
    – Niels R.
    Dec 30, 2013 at 18:38
  • This code-only answer seems to be drifting away from the scope of the question (doesn't this answer just repeat what earlier answers already said?) and should include some plain-speak that explains the snippet. Oct 12, 2020 at 23:05
3
$save_folder = "some/path/" . date('dmy');

if (!file_exists($save_folder)) {
   mkdir($save_folder, 0777);
}
2
  • 3
    Setting chmod 777 is never a good idea. 755 is sufficient for folders.
    – Oldskool
    Jun 11, 2015 at 8:22
  • 1
    This post is missing its educational explanation. Oct 12, 2020 at 23:03
2

This is an old, but still topical question. Just test with the is_dir() or file_exists() function for the presence of the . or .. file in the directory under test. Each directory must contain these files:

is_dir("path_to_directory/.");    
0
1

Well instead of checking both, you could do if(stream_resolve_include_path($folder)!==false). It is slower but kills two birds in one shot.

Another option is to simply ignore the E_WARNING, not by using @mkdir(...); (because that would simply waive all possible warnings, not just the directory already exists one), but by registering a specific error handler before doing it:

namespace com\stackoverflow;

set_error_handler(function($errno, $errm) { 
    if (strpos($errm,"exists") === false) throw new \Exception($errm); //or better: create your own FolderCreationException class
});
mkdir($folder);
/* possibly more mkdir instructions, which is when this becomes useful */
restore_error_handler();
1

This is how I do

if(is_dir("./folder/test"))
{
  echo "Exist";
}else{
  echo "Not exist";
}
1
  • 3
    When answering an old question, your answer would be much more useful to other StackOverflow users if you included some context to explain how your answer helps, particularly for a question that already has an accepted answer. See: How do I write a good answer.
    – David Buck
    Nov 30, 2019 at 20:26
0

A way to check if a path is directory can be following:

function isDirectory($path) {
    $all = @scandir($path);
    return $all !== false;
}

NOTE: It will return false for non-existant path too, but works perfectly for UNIX/Windows

0

i think this is fast solution for dir check.

$path = realpath($Newfolder);
if (!empty($path)){
   echo "1";
}else{
   echo "0";
}

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