(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
ob_start — Turn on output buffering
$callback
= null
, int $chunk_size
= 0, int $flags
= PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_STDFLAGS
): boolThis function will turn output buffering on. While output buffering is active no output is sent from the script, instead the output is stored in an internal buffer. See What Output Is Buffered? on exactly what output is affected.
Output buffers are stackable, that is, ob_start() may be called while another buffer is active. If multiple output buffers are active, output is being filtered sequentially through each of them in nesting order. See Nesting Output Buffers for more details.
See User-Level Output Buffers for a detailed description of output buffers.
callback
An optional callback
callable may be
specified. It can also be bypassed by passing null
.
callback
is invoked when the output buffer is
flushed (sent), cleaned, or when the output buffer is flushed
at the end of the script.
The signature of the callback
is as follows:
buffer
phase
PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_*
constants
.
See Flags Passed To Output Handlers
for more details.
If callback
returns false
the contents of the buffer are returned.
See Output Handler Return Values
for more details.
Calling any of the following functions from within an output handler will result in a fatal error: ob_clean(), ob_end_clean(), ob_end_flush(), ob_flush(), ob_get_clean(), ob_get_flush(), ob_start().
See Output Handlers
and Working With Output Handlers
for more details on callback
s (output handlers).
chunk_size
If the optional parameter chunk_size
is passed,
the buffer will be flushed after any block of code resulting in output
that causes the buffer's length to equal
or exceed chunk_size
.
The default value 0
means
that all output is buffered until the buffer is turned off.
See Buffer Size for more details.
flags
The flags
parameter is a bitmask that controls
the operations that can be performed on the output buffer. The default
is to allow output buffers to be cleaned, flushed and removed, which
can be set explicitly via the
buffer control flags
.
See Operations Allowed On Buffers
for more details.
Each flag controls access to a set of functions, as described below:
Constant | Functions |
---|---|
PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CLEANABLE |
ob_clean() |
PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_FLUSHABLE |
ob_flush() |
PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_REMOVABLE |
ob_end_clean(), ob_end_flush(), ob_get_clean(), ob_get_flush() |
Example #1 User defined callback function example
<?php
function callback($buffer)
{
// replace all the apples with oranges
return (str_replace("apples", "oranges", $buffer));
}
ob_start("callback");
?>
<html>
<body>
<p>It's like comparing apples to oranges.</p>
</body>
</html>
<?php
ob_end_flush();
?>
The above example will output:
<html> <body> <p>It's like comparing oranges to oranges.</p> </body> </html>
Example #2 Creating an unerasable output buffer
<?php
ob_start(null, 0, PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_STDFLAGS ^ PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_REMOVABLE);
?>