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[edit] Last updated: Fri, 23 Mar 2012

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getenv

(PHP 4, PHP 5)

getenvBir ortam değişkeninin değerini döndürür

Açıklama

string getenv ( string $değişken )

Belirtilen ortam değişkeninin değerini döndürür.

Tüm ortam değişkenlerini phpinfo() işlevini kullanarak bir liste halinde görebilirsiniz. Bunların pek çoğunun anlamlarını » CGI belirtimi belgesinin özellikle » ortam değişkenleri ile ilgili sayfasında bulabilirsiniz.

Değiştirgeler

değişken

Ortam değişkeninin ismi.

Dönen Değerler

Bir hata oluşursa FALSE aksi takdirde değişken ile belirtilen ortam değişkeninin değerini döndürür.

Örnekler

Örnek 1 - getenv() örneği

<?php
// getenv() kullanım örneği
$ip getenv('REMOTE_ADDR');

//Veya basitçe bir süper küresel kullan ($_SERVER veya $_ENV)
$ip $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'];
?>

Ayrıca Bakınız



getlastmod> <get_required_files
[edit] Last updated: Fri, 23 Mar 2012
 
add a note add a note User Contributed Notes getenv
php at keith tyler dot com 08-Feb-2012 12:51
All of the notes and examples so far have been strictly CGI.
It should not be understated the usefulness of getenv()/putenv() in CLI as well.

You can pass a number of variables to a CLI script via environment variables, either in Unix/Linux bash/sh with the "VAR='foo'; export $VAR" paradigm, or in Windows with the "set VAR='foo'" paradigm. (Csh users, you're on your own!) getenv("VAR") will retrieve that value from the environment.

We have a system by which we include a file full of putenv() statements storing configuration values that can apply to many different CLI PHP programs. But if we want to override these values, we can use the shell's (or calling application, such as ant) environment variable setting method to do so.

This saves us from having to manage an unmanageable amount of one-off configuration changes per execution via command line arguments; instead we just set the appropriate env var first.
eng.mrkto.com 29-Jul-2010 11:36
This function is useful (compared to $_SERVER, $_ENV) because it searches $varname key in those array case-insensitive manner.
For example on Windows $_SERVER['Path'] is like you see Capitalized, not 'PATH' as you expected.
So just: <?php getenv('path') ?>
chuck dot reeves at gmail dot com 06-May-2010 11:59
When writing CLI applications, not that any environment variables that are set in your web server config will not be passed through.  PHP will pass through system environment variables that are prefixed based off the safe_mode_allowed_env_vars directive in your php.ini
f dot hartmann2 at gmx dot net 23-Jul-2009 05:42
A function returning the remote adress of the visiting browser could look like this:

<?php
function getIPfromXForwarded() {
   
$ipString=@getenv("HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR");
   
$addr = explode(",",$ipString);
    return
$addr[sizeof($addr)-1];
}
?>

Note that some adresses are followed by a whitespace and ip2long(getIPfromXForwarded()) would not return the expected result.

Make use of trim() in your scripts, either in the function itself, or the surrounding space of the caller.

Greetings
estarapapax at gmail dot com 18-Feb-2009 09:19
This is a sample function for checking if your visitor comes from this certain country. This is especially useful for amateur webmasters who don't want to use sql databases.

Sample use of function:
<?php
if(check_coutry('http://www.domain.com/files/philippines.csv') === true)
      echo
'You are from the Philippines';
?>

Basically, you'll need CSV (or TXT) which lists the IP ranges of a certain country. Example (excerpt of the philippines.csv only):

58.69.0.0, 58.69.255.255
58.71.0.0, 58.71.127.255
61.9.0.0, 61.9.127.255
61.14.28.0, 61.14.28.63
61.14.41.136, 61.14.41.143
and so on until the end

You may obtain these CSV files in a number of websites out there. Be sure to update these CSV files regularly as these IP ranges change from time to time.

Here is the function:
<?php
function check_country($url_csv){
$curl_handle = curl_init();
curl_setopt($curl_handle, CURLOPT_URL, $url_csv);
curl_setopt($curl_handle, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, 1);
$str_fromfile = curl_exec($curl_handle);
curl_close($curl_handle);
$range = explode("\n", $str_fromfile);

$ip_addr = getenv(REMOTE_ADDR); //gets the IP of the visitor
$ip_byte = explode('.', $ip_addr);
$ip_number = (16777216 * (int) $ip_byte[0]) + (65536 * (int) $ip_byte[1]) + (256 * (int) $ip_byte[2]) + ((int) $ip_byte[3]);

for(
$i = 0; $range[$i] != NULL && $is_positive == NULL; $i++){ // the condition $line[$i] != NULL means that you should not put blank lines before the end of your CSV. The values should start at line 1.
   
$range[$i] = rtrim(ltrim($range[$i])); //you may remove this if you are sure the CSV doesnt contain whitespaces
   
$ends_addr = explode(',', $range[$i]); //for CSV (comma-separated values), comma is the separator. You may change this if your TXT uses different separator.
   
$ends_addr[0] = rtrim($ends_addr[0]); //again, you may remove this if your CSV is free from whitespaces
   
$ends_addr[1] = ltrim($ends_addr[1]); //yet, again
   
$start_ip_byte = explode('.', $ends_addr[0]);
   
$end_ip_byte = explode('.', $ends_addr[1]);
   
$start_ip_number = (16777216 * (int) $start_ip_byte[0]) + (65536 * (int) $start_ip_byte[1]) + (256 * (int) $start_ip_byte[2]) + ((int) $start_ip_byte[3]);
   
$end_ip_number = (16777216 * (int) $end_ip_byte[0]) + (65536 * (int) $end_ip_byte[1]) + (256 * (int) $end_ip_byte[2]) + ((int) $end_ip_byte[3]);
      
    if(
$ip_number >= $start_ip_number && $ip_number <= $end_ip_number)
           
$is_positive = 1;
}
  
    if(
$is_positive == 1)
        return
true;
    else
        return
false;
}
?>
sam at sambarrow dot com 12-Mar-2008 05:32
SERVER_NAME is the name defined in the apache configuration.
HTTP_HOST is the host header sent by the client when using the more recent versions of the http protocol.
renko at <remove>virtual-life dot net 08-Nov-2004 06:40
The function 'getenv' does not work if your Server API is ASAPI (IIS).

So, try to don't use getenv('REMOTE_ADDR'), but $_SERVER["REMOTE_ADDR"].
kyong 04-Feb-2004 01:06
As you know, getenv('DOCUMENT_ROOT') is useful.
However, under CLI environment(I tend to do quick check
if it works or not), it doesn't work without modified php.ini
file. So I add "export DOCUMENT_ROOT=~" in my .bash_profile.
daman at SPAM_BlockERmralaska dot com 08-Sep-2002 06:37
Be careful using HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR in conditional statements collecting the IP address. Sometimes the user's LAN address will get forwarded, which of course is pretty worthless by itself.
alex at acid-edge dot net 23-Jul-2002 10:32
Note that some caches seem to send the client-ip header *backwards*. be careful :)
john-php at pc dot xs4all dot nl 15-Aug-2000 06:56
Note that the X-Forwarded for header might contain multiple addresses, comma separated, if the request was forwarded through multiple proxies.

Finally, note that any user can add an X-Forwarded-For header themselves. The header is only good for traceback information, never for authentication. If you use it for traceback, just log the entire X-Forwarded-For header, along with the REMOTE_ADDR.

 
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