(PHP 5 >= 5.3.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)
The Filesystem iterator
$directory, int $flags = FilesystemIterator::KEY_AS_PATHNAME | FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_AS_FILEINFO | FilesystemIterator::SKIP_DOTS)$mode = "r", bool $useIncludePath = false , ? resource $context = null ): SplFileObject FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_AS_PATHNAME Makes FilesystemIterator::current() return the pathname.
FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_AS_FILEINFO Makes FilesystemIterator::current() return an SplFileInfo instance.
FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_AS_SELF Makes FilesystemIterator::current() return $this (the FilesystemIterator).
FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_MODE_MASK FilesystemIterator::KEY_AS_PATHNAME Makes FilesystemIterator::key() return the pathname.
FilesystemIterator::KEY_AS_FILENAME Makes FilesystemIterator::key() return the filename.
FilesystemIterator::FOLLOW_SYMLINKS Makes RecursiveDirectoryIterator::hasChildren() follow symlinks.
FilesystemIterator::KEY_MODE_MASK FilesystemIterator::NEW_CURRENT_AND_KEY Same as FilesystemIterator::KEY_AS_FILENAME | FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_AS_FILEINFO.
FilesystemIterator::OTHER_MODE_MASK Mask used for FilesystemIterator::getFlags() and FilesystemIterator::setFlags() .
FilesystemIterator::SKIP_DOTS Skips dot files (. and ..).
FilesystemIterator::UNIX_PATHS
Makes paths use Unix-style forward slash irrespective of system default.
Note that the path that is passed to the
constructor is not modified.
You may be wondering, like I did, what is the difference between this class and DirectoryIterator?
When you iteterate using DirectoryIterator each "value" returned is the same DirectoryIterator object. The internal state is changed so when you call isDir(), getPathname(), etc the correct information is returned. If you were to ask for a key when iterating you will get an integer index value.
FilesystemIterator (and RecursiveDirectoryIterator) on the other hand returns a new, different SplFileInfo object for each iteration step. The key is the full pathname of the file. This is by default. You can change what is returned for the key or value using the "flags" arguement to the constructor.Here's a great little drop in replacement for FilesystemIterator I wrote to easily Iterate your filesystem, including:
* Sorting - using ArrayIterator
* Regex Matching - using RegexIterator
* Limiting - using LimitIterator
It's fully chainable
<?php
// Sort by filemtime
$files = (new AdvancedFilesystemIterator('/path/to/files'))->sortByMTime();
// Sort by filemtime -> Limit output to 10
$files = (new AdvancedFilesystemIterator('/path/to/files'))->sortByMTime()->limit(0, 10);
// Sort by filemtime -> Only get CSV files -> Limit to 10
$files = (new AdvancedFilesystemIterator('/path/to/files'))->sortByMTime()->match('/csv$/')->limit(0, 10);
// Sort by filemtime -> Only get CSV files -> Limit to 10 -> and back to sorting by Filename
$files = (new AdvancedFilesystemIterator('/path/to/files'))->sortByMTime()->match('/csv$/')->limit(0, 10)->sortByFilename();
// Sort by any of SplFileInfo's get*() methods i.e. Owner, CTime, Basename, ATime, Perms, Type, isFile, anything
$files = (new AdvancedFilesystemIterator('/path/to/files'))->sortByOwner();
// Foreach
foreach ((new AdvancedFilesystemIterator('/path/to/files'))->sortByMTime()->match('/csv$/')->limit(0, 10) AS $file)
{
print $file->getFilename() . "<br>\n";
}
// The Class
class AdvancedFilesystemIterator extends ArrayIterator
{
public function __construct(string $path, int $flags = FilesystemIterator::KEY_AS_PATHNAME | FilesystemIterator::CURRENT_AS_FILEINFO | FilesystemIterator::SKIP_DOTS)
{
parent::__construct(iterator_to_array(new FilesystemIterator($path, $flags)));
}
public function __call(string $name, array $arguments)
{
if (preg_match('/^sortBy(.*)/', $name, $m)) return $this->sort('get' . $m[1]);
throw new MemberAccessException('Method ' . $methodName . ' not exists');
}
public function sort($method)
{
if (!method_exists('SplFileInfo', $method)) throw new InvalidArgumentException(sprintf('Method "%s" does not exist in SplFileInfo', $method));
$this->uasort(function(SplFileInfo $a, SplFileInfo $b) use ($method) { return (is_string($a->$method()) ? strnatcmp($a->$method(), $b->$method()) : $b->$method() - $a->$method()); });
return $this;
}
public function limit(int $offset = 0, int $limit = -1)
{
return parent::__construct(iterator_to_array(new LimitIterator($this, $offset, $limit))) ?? $this;
}
public function match(string $regex, int $mode = RegexIterator::MATCH, int $flags = 0, int $preg_flags = 0)
{
return parent::__construct(iterator_to_array(new RegexIterator($this, $regex, $mode, $flags, $preg_flags))) ?? $this;
}
}DirectoryIterator returns virtual directories "." and ".." in a loop.
But FilesystemIterator ignores them.Here's the difference between DirectoryIterator and FileSystemIterator.
FileSystemIterator extends DirectoryIterator, inheriting all of it's functionalities, but extending it with additional options and features:
- Additional flags and options (e.g., FileSystemIterator::SKIP_DOTS to skip . and .. entries).
- Offers more control and flexibility over the iteration process.
- Suitable for more complex directory traversal requirements where additional control is needed.
So if you just need the contents of a directory, use DirectoryIterator.
If you need to do directory traversal, use FileSystemIterator.