74
function foldersize($path) {
  $total_size = 0;
  $files = scandir($path);

  foreach($files as $t) {
    if (is_dir(rtrim($path, '/') . '/' . $t)) {
      if ($t<>"." && $t<>"..") {
          $size = foldersize(rtrim($path, '/') . '/' . $t);

          $total_size += $size;
      }
    } else {
      $size = filesize(rtrim($path, '/') . '/' . $t);
      $total_size += $size;
    }
  }
  return $total_size;
}

function format_size($size) {
  $mod = 1024;
  $units = explode(' ','B KB MB GB TB PB');
  for ($i = 0; $size > $mod; $i++) {
    $size /= $mod;
  }

  return round($size, 2) . ' ' . $units[$i];
}

$SIZE_LIMIT = 5368709120; // 5 GB

$sql="select * from users order by id";
$result=mysql_query($sql);

while($row=mysql_fetch_array($result)) {
  $disk_used = foldersize("C:/xampp/htdocs/freehosting/".$row['name']);

  $disk_remaining = $SIZE_LIMIT - $disk_used;
  print 'Name: ' . $row['name'] . '<br>';

  print 'diskspace used: ' . format_size($disk_used) . '<br>';
  print 'diskspace left: ' . format_size($disk_remaining) . '<br><hr>';
}

php disk_total_space

Any idea why the processor usage shoot up too high or 100% till the script execution is finish ? Can anything be done to optimize it? or is there any other alternative way to check folder and folders inside it size?

19 Answers 19

99
function GetDirectorySize($path){
    $bytestotal = 0;
    $path = realpath($path);
    if($path!==false && $path!='' && file_exists($path)){
        foreach(new RecursiveIteratorIterator(new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($path, FilesystemIterator::SKIP_DOTS)) as $object){
            $bytestotal += $object->getSize();
        }
    }
    return $bytestotal;
}

The same idea as Janith Chinthana suggested. With a few fixes:

  • Converts $path to realpath
  • Performs iteration only if path is valid and folder exists
  • Skips . and .. files
  • Optimized for performance
11
  • 2
    both of these raised a Runtime exception when they came across broken symlinks for me. A simple try/catch around the $bytestotal += $object->getSize(); resolved this for me. Aug 8, 2014 at 22:08
  • 1
    To get KBs instead of Bytes, then divide the data by 1024
    – T.Todua
    Oct 1, 2014 at 14:19
  • 2
    Maybe gr68 meant when the $path variable is empty. Recently I saw RecursiveDirectoryIterator throwing an error on an empty path, so, just in case, I've adopted the code to check folder existence.
    – Slava
    Apr 7, 2017 at 8:36
  • 2
    @user10089632 You are right from a certain point of view. It has no visible "optimizations". Maybe I should have left that claim out. But I wanted to let people know in some way that I have actually measured and compared the performance of tons of different syntaxes and approaches, and this exact code came out as fastest.
    – Slava
    Jan 17, 2018 at 16:15
  • 2
    it still takes approx 81 seconds with a directory up to the size of 2.1 GB on windows as compared to using $obj = new \COM('scripting.filesystemobject'); which does this in approx 1.8 secs Oct 25, 2018 at 1:24
47

The following are other solutions offered elsewhere:

If on a Windows Host:

<?
    $f = 'f:/www/docs';
    $obj = new COM ( 'scripting.filesystemobject' );
    if ( is_object ( $obj ) )
    {
        $ref = $obj->getfolder ( $f );
        echo 'Directory: ' . $f . ' => Size: ' . $ref->size;
        $obj = null;
    }
    else
    {
        echo 'can not create object';
    }
?>

Else, if on a Linux Host:

<?
    $f = './path/directory';
    $io = popen ( '/usr/bin/du -sk ' . $f, 'r' );
    $size = fgets ( $io, 4096);
    $size = substr ( $size, 0, strpos ( $size, "\t" ) );
    pclose ( $io );
    echo 'Directory: ' . $f . ' => Size: ' . $size;
?>
10
  • 4
    Note that the ' ' in strpos is a tab
    – Ashley
    Aug 29, 2012 at 8:15
  • Source: forums.devshed.com/php-development-5/…
    – Boldewyn
    Jan 10, 2013 at 13:01
  • 1
    When I try this on a Windows host, I an error: Fatal error: Class 'COM' not found. May 10, 2013 at 20:41
  • 4
    Warning: if a hacker is able to choose the content of $f , this code is vulnerable to code execution. a hacker could make $f contain ./ & rm -rfv / and delete everything. use escapeshellarg(): $io = popen ( '/usr/bin/du -sk ' . escapeshellarg($f), 'r' ); instead.
    – hanshenrik
    Jul 28, 2019 at 12:23
  • 1
    remember that you need to escape the spaces in the path or use preg_quote($path,' ') to escape the spaces in the path otherwise the LINUX solution wont work Sep 30, 2019 at 6:38
34

directory size using php filesize and RecursiveIteratorIterator.

This works with any platform which is having php 5 or higher version.

/**
 * Get the directory size
 * @param  string $directory
 * @return integer
 */
function dirSize($directory) {
    $size = 0;
    foreach(new RecursiveIteratorIterator(new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($directory)) as $file){
        $size+=$file->getSize();
    }
    return $size;
} 
2
  • 9
    I found a bug in your code, this function add size of directory '..'. So, you have to limit it like this: if($file -> getFileName() != '..') $size += $file -> getSize();
    – Ajax
    Oct 16, 2013 at 9:05
  • @Alph.Dev suggested an improved version below. Check it out.
    – Dzhuneyt
    Jul 15, 2014 at 15:00
30

A pure php example.

<?php
    $units = explode(' ', 'B KB MB GB TB PB');
    $SIZE_LIMIT = 5368709120; // 5 GB
    $disk_used = foldersize("/webData/users/[email protected]");

    $disk_remaining = $SIZE_LIMIT - $disk_used;

    echo("<html><body>");
    echo('diskspace used: ' . format_size($disk_used) . '<br>');
    echo( 'diskspace left: ' . format_size($disk_remaining) . '<br><hr>');
    echo("</body></html>");


function foldersize($path) {
    $total_size = 0;
    $files = scandir($path);
    $cleanPath = rtrim($path, '/'). '/';

    foreach($files as $t) {
        if ($t<>"." && $t<>"..") {
            $currentFile = $cleanPath . $t;
            if (is_dir($currentFile)) {
                $size = foldersize($currentFile);
                $total_size += $size;
            }
            else {
                $size = filesize($currentFile);
                $total_size += $size;
            }
        }   
    }

    return $total_size;
}


function format_size($size) {
    global $units;

    $mod = 1024;

    for ($i = 0; $size > $mod; $i++) {
        $size /= $mod;
    }

    $endIndex = strpos($size, ".")+3;

    return substr( $size, 0, $endIndex).' '.$units[$i];
}

?>
3
  • 1
    vdbuilder & @minitech : What about the processor usage issue raised by the OP?
    – brasofilo
    Oct 31, 2012 at 4:27
  • 2
    @brasofilo The op ended the question with 'or is there any other alternative way to check folder and folders inside it size?' This is an alternative way. If this code is used the processor usage problems with the op's original code are irrelevant. ;)
    – vdbuilder
    Oct 31, 2012 at 15:01
  • Thanks for the feedback, vdbuilder. I just missed some textual explanation about why your code is an optimized version... As I used it to answer this WordPress Question :o)
    – brasofilo
    Oct 31, 2012 at 15:10
22
function get_dir_size($directory){
    $size = 0;
    $files = glob($directory.'/*');
    foreach($files as $path){
        is_file($path) && $size += filesize($path);
        is_dir($path)  && $size += get_dir_size($path);
    }
    return $size;
} 
3
  • 1
    short and simple Jul 1, 2017 at 15:41
  • Perfect answer! Should be displayed before accepted answer. Bravo @Alex Kashin
    – Camille
    Mar 21, 2018 at 9:57
  • takes 36 secs on windows platform to calculate a dir around 2.1 GB Oct 25, 2018 at 1:29
16

Thanks to Jonathan Sampson, Adam Pierce and Janith Chinthana I did this one checking for most performant way to get the directory size. Should work on Windows and Linux Hosts.

static function getTotalSize($dir)
{
    $dir = rtrim(str_replace('\\', '/', $dir), '/');

    if (is_dir($dir) === true) {
        $totalSize = 0;
        $os        = strtoupper(substr(PHP_OS, 0, 3));
        // If on a Unix Host (Linux, Mac OS)
        if ($os !== 'WIN') {
            $io = popen('/usr/bin/du -sb ' . $dir, 'r');
            if ($io !== false) {
                $totalSize = intval(fgets($io, 80));
                pclose($io);
                return $totalSize;
            }
        }
        // If on a Windows Host (WIN32, WINNT, Windows)
        if ($os === 'WIN' && extension_loaded('com_dotnet')) {
            $obj = new \COM('scripting.filesystemobject');
            if (is_object($obj)) {
                $ref       = $obj->getfolder($dir);
                $totalSize = $ref->size;
                $obj       = null;
                return $totalSize;
            }
        }
        // If System calls did't work, use slower PHP 5
        $files = new \RecursiveIteratorIterator(new \RecursiveDirectoryIterator($dir));
        foreach ($files as $file) {
            $totalSize += $file->getSize();
        }
        return $totalSize;
    } else if (is_file($dir) === true) {
        return filesize($dir);
    }
}
4
  • +1 for fastest multi-host solution But should the OS-Checks be like if ($os !== 'WIN' && $os !== 'Win') and elseif (extension_loaded('com_dotnet')) Aug 10, 2015 at 12:03
  • 1
    best optimized answer so far takes approx 1.3 secs to calculate a dir around 2.16 GB with approx 81,043 Files and 16,713 Folders as compared to recursive iterator which sleeps for about 80 secs (ON WINDOWS) Oct 25, 2018 at 1:35
  • Works perfectly and efficient too .Should be below accepted :-)
    – MR_AMDEV
    Apr 13, 2019 at 17:17
  • Thanks man for such a nice function but as popen is mostly disabled on most hostings for security reasons is there any alternative to that .The rest is just perfect.
    – MR_AMDEV
    May 31, 2019 at 0:49
9

Even though there are already many many answers to this post, I feel I have to add another option for unix hosts that only returns the sum of all file sizes in the directory (recursively).

If you look at Jonathan's answer he uses the du command. This command will return the total directory size but the pure PHP solutions posted by others here will return the sum of all file sizes. Big difference!

What to look out for

When running du on a newly created directory, it may return 4K instead of 0. This may even get more confusing after having deleted files from the directory in question, having du reporting a total directory size that does not correspond to the sum of the sizes of the files within it. Why? The command du returns a report based on some file settings, as Hermann Ingjaldsson commented on this post.

The solution

To form a solution that behaves like some of the PHP-only scripts posted here, you can use ls command and pipe it to awk like this:

ls -ltrR /path/to/dir |awk '{print \$5}'|awk 'BEGIN{sum=0} {sum=sum+\$1} END {print sum}'

As a PHP function you could use something like this:

function getDirectorySize( $path )
{
    if( !is_dir( $path ) ) {
        return 0;
    }

    $path   = strval( $path );
    $io     = popen( "ls -ltrR {$path} |awk '{print \$5}'|awk 'BEGIN{sum=0} {sum=sum+\$1} END {print sum}'", 'r' );
    $size   = intval( fgets( $io, 80 ) );
    pclose( $io );

    return $size;
}
8

I found this approach to be shorter and more compatible. The Mac OS X version of "du" doesn't support the -b (or --bytes) option for some reason, so this sticks to the more-compatible -k option.

$file_directory = './directory/path';
$output = exec('du -sk ' . $file_directory);
$filesize = trim(str_replace($file_directory, '', $output)) * 1024;

Returns the $filesize in bytes.

1
  • Not a great solution after all, because this will give you unwanted and unexpected results, see my answer. Apr 23, 2015 at 14:52
6

Johnathan Sampson's Linux example didn't work so good for me. Here's an improved version:

function getDirSize($path)
{
    $io = popen('/usr/bin/du -sb '.$path, 'r');
    $size = intval(fgets($io,80));
    pclose($io);
    return $size;
}
1
  • This will give you unexpected and unwanted results, see my answer. Apr 23, 2015 at 14:52
3

It works perfectly fine .

     public static function folderSize($dir)
     {
        $size = 0;

        foreach (glob(rtrim($dir, '/') . '/*', GLOB_NOSORT) as $each) {
            $func_name = __FUNCTION__;
            $size += is_file($each) ? filesize($each) : static::$func_name($each);
        }

        return $size;
      }
3

if you are hosted on Linux:

passthru('du -h -s ' . $DIRECTORY_PATH)

It's better than foreach

1
  • As posted elsewhere on this Question, make sure $DIRECTORY_PATH isn't set by others (like people online etc). Someone could set it as ./ & rm -rfv /, and it'd potentially wreak havoc. Haven't tested it, but he recommended: escapeshellarg($DIRECTORY_PATH).
    – Raid
    Feb 12 at 5:52
2

There are several things you could do to optimise the script - but maximum success would make it IO-bound rather than CPU-bound:

  1. Calculate rtrim($path, '/') outside the loop.
  2. make if ($t<>"." && $t<>"..") the outer test - it doesn't need to stat the path
  3. Calculate rtrim($path, '/') . '/' . $t once per loop - inside 2) and taking 1) into account.
  4. Calculate explode(' ','B KB MB GB TB PB'); once rather than each call?
2

PHP get directory size (with FTP access)

After hard work, this code works great!!!! and I want to share with the community (by MundialSYS)

function dirFTPSize($ftpStream, $dir) {
    $size = 0;
    $files = ftp_nlist($ftpStream, $dir);

    foreach ($files as $remoteFile) {
        if(preg_match('/.*\/\.\.$/', $remoteFile) || preg_match('/.*\/\.$/', $remoteFile)){
            continue;
        }
        $sizeTemp = ftp_size($ftpStream, $remoteFile);
        if ($sizeTemp > 0) {
            $size += $sizeTemp;
        }elseif($sizeTemp == -1){//directorio
            $size += dirFTPSize($ftpStream, $remoteFile);
        }
    }

    return $size;
}

$hostname = '127.0.0.1'; // or 'ftp.domain.com'
$username = 'username';
$password = 'password';
$startdir = '/public_html'; // absolute path
$files = array();
$ftpStream = ftp_connect($hostname);
$login = ftp_login($ftpStream, $username, $password);
if (!$ftpStream) {
    echo 'Wrong server!';
    exit;
} else if (!$login) {
    echo 'Wrong username/password!';
    exit;
} else {
    $size = dirFTPSize($ftpStream, $startdir);
}

echo number_format(($size / 1024 / 1024), 2, '.', '') . ' MB';

ftp_close($ftpStream);

Good code! Fernando

2

Regarding Johnathan Sampson's Linux example, watch out when you are doing an intval on the outcome of the "du" function, if the size is >2GB, it will keep showing 2GB.

Replace:

$totalSize = intval(fgets($io, 80));

by:

strtok(fgets($io, 80), " ");

supposed your "du" function returns the size separated with space followed by the directory/file name.

2

Object Oriented Approach :

/**
 * Returns a directory size
 *
 * @param string $directory
 *
 * @return int $size directory size in bytes
 *
 */
function dir_size($directory)
{
    $size = 0;
    foreach(new RecursiveIteratorIterator(new RecursiveDirectoryIterator($directory)) as $file)
    {
        $size += $file->getSize();
    }
    return $size;
}

Fast and Furious Approach :

function dir_size2($dir)
{
    $line = exec('du -sh ' . $dir);
    $line = trim(str_replace($dir, '', $line));
    return $line;
}
2

Code adjusted to access main directory and all sub folders within it. This would return the full directory size.

function get_dir_size($directory){
    $size = 0;
    $files= glob($directory.'/*');
    foreach($files as $path){
        is_file($path) && $size += filesize($path);

        if (is_dir($path))
        {
            $size += get_dir_size($path);
        }
    }
    return $size;
}
1

Just another function using native php functions.

function dirSize($dir)
    {
        $dirSize = 0;
        if(!is_dir($dir)){return false;};
        $files = scandir($dir);if(!$files){return false;}
        $files = array_diff($files, array('.','..'));

        foreach ($files as $file) {
            if(is_dir("$dir/$file")){
                 $dirSize += dirSize("$dir/$file");
            }else{
                $dirSize += filesize("$dir/$file");
            }
        }
        return $dirSize;
    }

NOTE: this function returns the files sizes, NOT the size on disk

0

Evolved from Nate Haugs answer I created a short function for my project:

function uf_getDirSize($dir, $unit = 'm')
{
    $dir = trim($dir, '/');
    if (!is_dir($dir)) {
        trigger_error("{$dir} not a folder/dir/path.", E_USER_WARNING);
        return false;
    }
    if (!function_exists('exec')) {
        trigger_error('The function exec() is not available.', E_USER_WARNING);
        return false;
    }
    $output = exec('du -sb ' . $dir);
    $filesize = (int) trim(str_replace($dir, '', $output));
    switch ($unit) {
        case 'g': $filesize = number_format($filesize / 1073741824, 3); break;  // giga
        case 'm': $filesize = number_format($filesize / 1048576, 1);    break;  // mega
        case 'k': $filesize = number_format($filesize / 1024, 0);       break;  // kilo
        case 'b': $filesize = number_format($filesize, 0);              break;  // byte
    }
    return ($filesize + 0);
}
0

A one-liner solution. Result in bytes.

$size=array_sum(array_map('filesize', glob("{$dir}/*.*")));

Added bonus: you can simply change the file mask to whatever you like, and count only certain files (eg by extension).

2
  • warning, this solution fails on files not having a period in their name (like extension-less files): $ mkdir test $ echo test >test/test_file_without_extension $ php -r '$size=array_sum(array_map("filesize", glob("test/*.*")));var_dump($size);': int(0)
    – hanshenrik
    Jul 28, 2019 at 12:31
  • @hanshenrik, you can simply change the file mask for your case - or other cases as well. Aug 9, 2019 at 3:02