The behaviour of these functions is affected by settings in php.ini.
Name | Default | Changeable | Changelog |
---|---|---|---|
allow_url_fopen | "1" | INI_SYSTEM |
|
allow_url_include | "0" | INI_SYSTEM |
Deprecated as of PHP 7.4.0. |
user_agent | NULL | INI_ALL |
|
default_socket_timeout | "60" | INI_ALL |
|
from | "" | INI_ALL |
|
auto_detect_line_endings | "0" | INI_ALL |
Deprecated as of PHP 8.1.0. |
sys_temp_dir | "" | INI_SYSTEM |
Here's a short explanation of the configuration directives.
allow_url_fopen
bool
This option enables the URL-aware fopen wrappers that enable accessing URL object like files. Default wrappers are provided for the access of remote files using the ftp or http protocol, some extensions like zlib may register additional wrappers.
allow_url_include
bool
This option allows the use of URL-aware fopen wrappers with the following functions: include, include_once, require, require_once.
Note:
This setting requires allow_url_fopen to be on.
user_agent
string
Define the user agent for PHP to send.
default_socket_timeout
int
Default timeout (in seconds) for socket based streams. Specifying a negative value means an infinite timeout.
from
string
The email address to be used on unauthenticated FTP connections and as the value of From header for HTTP connections, when using the ftp and http wrappers, respectively.
auto_detect_line_endings
bool
When turned on, PHP will examine the data read by fgets() and file() to see if it is using Unix, MS-Dos or Macintosh line-ending conventions.
This enables PHP to interoperate with Macintosh systems, but defaults to Off, as there is a very small performance penalty when detecting the EOL conventions for the first line, and also because people using carriage-returns as item separators under Unix systems would experience non-backwards-compatible behaviour.
sys_temp_dir
string