(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
ob_flush — Flush (send) the return value of the active output handler
This function calls the output handler
(with the PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_FLUSH
flag),
flushes (sends) its return value
and discards the contents of the active output buffer.
This function does not turn off the active output buffer like ob_end_flush() or ob_get_flush() does.
ob_flush() will fail
without an active output buffer started with the
PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_FLUSHABLE
flag.
This function has no parameters.
If the function fails it generates an E_NOTICE
.
As of August 2012, all browsers seem to show an all-or-nothing approach to buffering. In other words, while php is operating, no content can be shown.
In particular this means that the following workarounds listed further down here are ineffective:
1) ob_flush (), flush () in any combination with other output buffering functions;
2) changes to php.ini involving setting output_buffer and/or zlib.output_compression to 0 or Off;
3) setting Apache variables such as "no-gzip" either through apache_setenv () or through entries in .htaccess.
So, until browsers begin to show buffered content again, the tips listed here are moot.
some problems with ob_flush() and flush() could be resolved by defining content type header :
header( 'Content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8' );
so working code looks like this:
<?php
header( 'Content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8' );
echo 'Begin ...<br />';
for( $i = 0 ; $i < 10 ; $i++ )
{
echo $i . '<br />';
flush();
ob_flush();
sleep(1);
}
echo 'End ...<br />';
?>
The output buffer seems to work best when the server is returning a code 206 and setting the output_buffering lower temporarily to let it fill up
This tells the browser to wait for additional content
for example:
// Set the header to 206
header("HTTP/1.1 206 Partial Content; Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8");
// Flush the current outputbuffer
flush();
ob_flush();
ob_end_flush();
// Create a new output buffer
ob_start();
// Save the current output buffer size
$tempBuffering = ini_get("output_buffering");
// Set a new, much smaller buffer size
ini_set("output_buffering", 256);
// Do some buffering
!!! All your amazing code goes here !!!
// Fill the buffer with something if needed
echo str_pad(" ", (int)ini_get("output_buffering"), " ");
flush();
ob_flush();
// Revert the buffer size
ini_set("output_buffering", $tempBuffering);
Although browsers now have an all or none buffering strategy, the arguments are not moot.
If you are not using ob_flush, you run this risk of exceeding socket timeouts (commonly seen in php-fpm/nginx combos).
Basically, flushing solves the infamous 504 Gateway Time-out error.
If you call ob_flush() and flush() and still dont get the buffer flushed it might be because some antivirus software (Panda in this case) holds the buffer until the page has finished loaded before sending it to the browser.
If there is no active output buffer, an error of level E_NOTICE is generated (at least in PHP 7.1). To avoid this, test first with `ob_get_level()`.