(PHP 4, PHP 5)
ob_start — Ausgabepufferung aktivieren
Diese Funktion aktiviert die Ausgabepufferung. Während die Ausgabepufferung aktiv ist werden Scriptausgaben (mit Ausnahme von Headerinformationen) nicht direkt an den Client weitergegeben sondern in einem internen Puffer gesammelt.
Der Inhalt dieses internen Puffers kann mit Hilfe der Funktion ob_get_contents() in eine Stringvariable kopiert werden. Mit der Funktion ob_end_flush() können die Pufferinhalte an den Client ausgegeben werden, ob_end_clean() wird der Puffer ohne Ausgabe gelöscht.
ob_start() kann über den optionalen Parameter output_callback ein Funktion zur Nachbearbeitung der Pufferinhalte mitgegeben werden. Die Funktion sollte als einzigen Parameter einen String erwarten und auch einen String als Rückgabewert zurückliefern. Die so spezifizierte Funktion wird aufgerufen wenn der Pufferinhalt mit ob_end_flush() oder am Scriptende ausgegeben wird. Wenn output_callback aufgerufen wird erhält die Funktion den aktuellen Inhalt des Ausgabepuffers als Parameter, der Rückgabestring wird dann als neuer Pufferinhalt ausgegeben. Ist output_callback kein gültiger Callback-Parameter so gibt ob_start() false zurück. Hat die Callback-Funktion zwei Parameter so wird der zweite Parameter mit einer Bitmaske befüllt die sich aus den Werten PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_START, PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT und PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_END zusammensetzen kann. Liefert output_callback FALSE als Ergebnis so wird der ursprüngliche Pufferinhalt unverändert ausgegeben.
Hinweis:
ob_gzhandler() wurde in PHP 4.0.4 eingeführt um die gz-komprimierte Ausgabe an Clients zu ermöglichen die dies unterstützen. Wird ob_gzhandler() als Callback- Funktion spezifiziert so prüft es die vom Client unterstützten Ausgabecodierungen und gibt den Pufferinhalt dementsprechend codiert weiter.
Hinweis:
Vor PHP 4.3.2 lieferte die Funktion bei ungültigen output_callback Werten noch nicht FALSE zurück.
Einige Webserver (z.B. Apache) ändern das Arbeitsverzeichnis des Scripts vor dem Aufruf der Callback-Funktion am Scriptende. Sie können falls nötig mit Hilfe von chdir(dirname($_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME'])) wieder in das Scriptverzeichnis zurückwechselni.
Wird ein Wert für den optionalen Parameter chunk_size angegeben so wird die Callback-Funktion jeweils nach dem ersten Newline- Zeichen nach Überschreiten der so festgelegten Anzahl von Ausgabebytes aufgerufen. Wird NULL als Parameterwert übergeben so wird der Parameter ignoriert.
Wird für den Parameter erase FALSE übergeben so wird der Ausgabepuffer nur zum Scriptende geleert (ab PHP 4.3.0).
Ausgabepuffer können verschachtelt werden, d.g. Sie können ob_start() erneut aufrufen während bereits ein anderer ob_start() Aufruf aktiv ist. Sie müssen nur sicher stellen das Sie später auch ob_end_flush() entsprechend oft aufrufen. Sind mehrere Callback-Funktion aktiv so werden die Ausgaben der Reihe nach von Ausgabepuffer zu Ausgabepuffer weitergegeben und die Callback-Funktionen in Verschachtelungsreihenfolge aufgerufen.
ob_end_clean(), ob_end_flush(), ob_clean(), ob_flush() und ob_start() können innerhalb einer Callback-Funktion nicht benutzt werden, das Ergebnis eines solchen Aufrufs ist nicht definiert. Wenn Sie den Inhalt eines Puffers aus einem Callback löschen wollen so gegeben Sie einfach den Leerstring "" zurück. Auch Funktionen wie print_r($expression, true) oder highlight_file($filename, true) die den Ausgabepuffermechanismus intern nutzen können innerhalb eines Callbacks nicht benutzt werden.
Beispiel #1 Beispiel einer benutzerkonfigurierten Callbackfunktion
<?php
function callback($buffer)
{
// ersetzt Äpfel mit Birnen
return (str_replace("Äpfel", "Birnen", $buffer));
}
ob_start("callback");
?>
<html>
<body>
<p>Das ist wie Äpfel mit Birnen zu vergleichen.</p>
</body>
</html>
<?php
ob_end_flush();
?>
Would produce:
<html> <body> <p>Das ist wie Birnen mit Birnen zu vergleichen.</p> </body> </html>
Siehe auch ob_get_contents(), ob_end_flush(), ob_end_clean(), ob_implicit_flush(), ob_gzhandler(), ob_iconv_handler() mb_output_handler(), und ob_tidyhandler().
Careful with while using functions that change headers of a page; that change will not be undone when ending output buffering.
If you for instance have a class that generates an image and sets the appropriate headers, they will still be in place after the end of ob.
For instance:
<?php
ob_start();
myClass::renderPng(); //header("Content-Type: image/png"); in here
$pngString = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
?>
will put the image bytes into $pngString, and set the content type to image/png. Though the image will not be sent to the client, the png header is still in place; if you do html output here, the browser will most likely display "image error, cannot be viewed", at least firefox does.
You need to set the correct image type (text/html) manually in this case.
Hey folks,
as dan already noted, using the ob_gzhandler will make it impossible to get the content-length,
and thusly will make the download of files a little ugly.
the client cant show progress as it wont know how large it's targeted download actually is.
even if you write a custom handler, it seems impossible to set the buffer's size to a global.
the ob_handler seems to not share a global scope.
i wrote a small php to solve that problem, by not using the ob_* functions, but rather gzencode manually:
<?php
$file = $_REQUEST["file"] or die("Please specify the 'file' parameter.");
$allowedExtensions = array(
"jpg" => "image",
"png" => "image",
"gif" => "image"
);
$path = pathinfo($file);
if(!in_array(strtolower($path["extension"]), array_keys($allowedExtensions))) {
header("HTTP/1.0 403 Access denied");
die("403<br/>You dont have access to that file, wether it exists or not.");
}
$pack = true;
if(!empty($_SERVER["HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING"]) && strpos("gzip",$_SERVER["HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING"]) === NULL)
$pack = false;
if(!is_file($file) || !is_readable($file)) {
header("HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found");
die("404<br/>The file you are looking for is not available.");
}
$buffer = file_get_contents($file);
if($pack) {
header("Content-Encoding: gzip");
$buffer = gzencode($buffer,9,true);
}
$length = strlen($buffer);
header("Content-Type: {$allowedExtensions[$path["extension"]]}/{$path["extension"]}");
header("Content-Length: ".$length);
die($buffer);
?>
this will proxy images to a client, gzipping them at the highest compression-level.
to save the compression's overhead one could cache compressed outputs.
There is no start flag problem. One just has to notice that the second parameter is not a mode but consists of bitwise-OR'ed flags.
<?php
function ob_handler($string, $flags) {
static $input = array();
if ( $flags & PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_START )
$flags_sent[] = "PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_START";
if ( $flags & PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT )
$flags_sent[] = "PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT";
if ( $flags & PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_END )
$flags_sent[] = "PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_END";
$input[] = implode(' | ', $flags_sent) . " ($flags): $string<br />";
$output = "$string<br />";
if ( $flags & PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_END ) {
$output .= '<br />';
foreach($input as $k => $v) $output .= "$k: $v";
}
return $output;
}
ob_start('ob_handler');
echo 'flush';
ob_flush();
echo 'flush 2';
ob_flush();
echo 'clean';
ob_clean();
echo 'flush 3';
ob_flush();
echo 'end flush';
ob_end_flush();
?>
flush
flush 2
flush 3
end flush
0: PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_START | PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT (3): flush
1: PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT (2): flush 2
2: PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT (2): clean
3: PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT (2): flush 3
4: PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_END (4): end flush
With ob callback: note that the second parameter sent to your method won't help you differentiate between flush calls and calls to ob_clean, but the buffer contents is sent in both cases, so you end up parsing data that isn't going to be used. Also, note that the constant PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_START is never actually sent, rather the integer "3" turns up on first flush:
<?php
function ob_handler($string, $flag){
static $input = array();
$done = false;
switch($flag){
case PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_START:
$flag_sent = "PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_START ($flag)";
break;
case PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT:
$flag_sent = "PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT ($flag)";
break;
case PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_END:
$done = true;
$flag_sent = "PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_END ($flag)";
break;
default:
$flag_sent = "Flag is not a constant ($flag)";
}
$input[] = "$flag_sent: $string<br />";
$output = "$string<br />";
if(!$done) return $output;
// print_r($input, 1) causes an error and var_export just doesn't work
$output .= '<br />';
foreach($input as $k=>$v) $output .= "$k: $v";
return $output;
}
ob_start('ob_handler');
echo 'flush';
ob_flush();
echo 'flush 2';
ob_flush();
echo 'clean';
ob_clean();
echo 'flush 3';
ob_flush();
echo 'end flush';
ob_end_flush();
?>
 
flush
flush 2
flush 3
end flush
0: Flag is not a constant (3): flush
1: PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT (2): flush 2
2: PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT (2): clean
3: PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CONT (2): flush 3
4: PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_END (4): end flush
I suppose the START flag problem *may* be a bug but I'm not able to upgrade before reporting since I must have the same version as my server (I'm on PHP 5.2.6). If anyone has 5.2.11 or other stable version feel free to test/report as you see fit.
Make sure the editor you use does not add the UTF8/UTF16 BOM at the start of the scripts if you want to use ob_start("ob_gzhandler");
If those three characters are present, browsers like Firefox won't be able to decode the pages and will report:
Content Encoding Error
The page you are trying to view cannot be shown because it uses an invalid or unsupported form of compression.
The page you are trying to view cannot be shown because it uses an invalid or unsupported form of compression.
Google Chrome will simply report "Error 2 (net::ERR_FAILED): Unknown error."
With the ob_start command commented out, the page is successfully load and the browser will usually detect the BOM and not show it on the page, so everything's hard to debug.
Hi,
Just wanted to share the problem I had with a fresh installation of Windows Server 2008 using IIS7 with PHP5.2.9-2 (windows MSI installer). Could also be applicable to earlier PHP builds on that platform. It was installed as "IIS fastCGI". I've not really used windows server until a recent project came up and came across a really annoying issue with output buffering. No alteration of php.ini was required.
As you know, OB can be useful for user feedback e.g. timer or % complete effect.
The problem:
Everything installed perfectly (using binary mods as well). Scripts all ready in test rig i.e. "default website" folder on IIS. They worked as normal except for output buffering - nothing worked. The browser wouldn't flush anything until script execution had ceased. By browser I refer to all common (IE, Firefox, Opera, Safari). Even installing latest build Apache, bizarrely, (in case it was an IIS issue) yielded the same problem.
Example:
<?php
ob_start(); // Start output buffer (if not enabled in php.ini)
for($i=0; $i < 10; $i++)
{
echo $i, ' ';
ob_flush();
flush();
sleep(1);
}
?>
Expected: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 appearing incrementally every second in the browser.
Result: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 at once AFTER ten seconds.
I just couldn't get output buffering to work.
The Solution (requires admin rights):
Go to your server system drive e.g. c:\ and do the following...
C: > Windows > System32 > inetsrv > Config > applicationHost.Config
Go to the bottom of the page or look for your website e.g. <location path="Default Web Site"> Default could be whatever your server is.
ORIGINAL LINE: <add name="php" path="*.php" verb="*" modules="IsapiModule" scriptProcessor="C:\Program Files\PHP\php5isapi.dll" resourceType="Unspecified" />
CHANGE TO: <add name="php" path="*.php" verb="*" modules="IsapiModule" scriptProcessor="C:\Program Files\PHP\php5isapi.dll" resourceType="Unspecified" responseBufferLimit="0" />
You MUST add responseBufferLimit="0"
By default, IIS buffers everything up to a massive 4MB (think it's to do with ASP) only flushing after the script has finished execution. You need to override that and it's not really documented, which is rather annoying.
Hooray... You will instantly find that output buffering should now functions as normal.
When using brame buffer from time to time, you can see this warning
Warning: session_start() [function.session-start]: Cannot send session cache limiter - headers already sent
One of the many reasons may be in bad encoding of document. My experience, the document had header of utf-8 encoding but in fact it was win1252. After reconding to the utf-8 warning has disapeard.
Simple cache system for HTML:
<?php
$cacheFile = 'cache.html';
if ( (file_exists($cacheFile)) && ((fileatime($cacheFile) + 600) > time()) )
{
$content = file_get_contents($cacheFile);
echo $content;
} else
{
ob_start();
// write content
echo '<h1>Hello world to cache</h1>';
$content = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
file_put_contents($cacheFile,$content);
echo $content;
}
?>
Note that since PHP 5.1.x, all objects have their destructors called before the output buffer callback function executes. Thus, globalised objects will not be available as expected in the function.
This is stated to be intended behaviour, per http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=40104
There is a difference between the documentation and real callback functions invocation.
Manual says: "The function will be called when ob_end_flush() is called, or when the output buffer is flushed to the browser at the end of the request."
Actually, the callback function, once set by ob_start(), will be called regardless.
Here are the functions that invoke callback function immediately:
ob_clean
ob_end_clean
ob_end_flush
ob_flush
ob_get_clean
BUT only two of them return the result returned by the callback (ob_end_flush, ob_flush), other functions discard it.
At the end of the request, even if none of the functions listed above is called, the callback will be called anyway, and its result will be returned to the browser (well, at least this is corresponding to the manual).
There is one more trick:
If you set callback function with chunk_size > 1, callback function will be called each time output buffer is equal or exceeds chunk_size and its result will be output to the browser, even if you call any of ob_clean(), ob_end_clean(), ob_get_clean() later, so be aware of this fact.
Here's a nifty function I use daily. Essentially: include a PHP file - but render its output to a variable, rather than to the buffer. It's also set up to load the script with a variable set, and automagically loads globals into the script's namespace, making it an effective templating scheme. It also has error handling, so that you're not flying blind when using output buffering.
<?php
$GLOBALS['BufferedErrors']=Array();
function errorParse($errno, $errstr, $errfile, $errline, $errcontext) {
$errorTypes = Array(
E_ERROR => 'Fatal Error',
E_WARNING => 'Warning',
E_PARSE => 'Parse Error',
E_NOTICE => 'Notice',
E_CORE_ERROR => 'Fatal Core Error',
E_CORE_WARNING => 'Core Warning',
E_COMPILE_ERROR => 'Compilation Error',
E_COMPILE_WARNING => 'Compilation Warning',
E_USER_ERROR => 'Triggered Error',
E_USER_WARNING => 'Triggered Warning',
E_USER_NOTICE => 'Triggered Notice',
E_STRICT => 'Deprecation Notice',
E_RECOVERABLE_ERROR => 'Catchable Fatal Error'
);
$ret=(object)Array(
'number'=>$errno,
'message'=>$errstr,
'file'=>$errfile,
'line'=>$errline,
'context'=>$errcontext,
'type'=>$errorTypes[$errno]
);
$GLOBALS['BufferedErrors'][]=$ret;
return false;
}
function parse($fileToInclude, $argumentsToFile=false) {
$bufferedErrorStack = $GLOBALS['BufferedErrors'];
set_error_handler('errorParse', error_reporting());
$GLOBALS['BufferedErrors']=Array();
if (!file_exists($fileToInclude))
return '';
if ($argumentsToFile === false)
$argumentsToFile = Array();
$argumentsToFile = array_merge($GLOBALS, $argumentsToFile);
foreach ($argumentsToFile as $variableName => $variableValue)
$$variableName = $variableValue;
ob_start();
include($fileToInclude);
$ret = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
restore_error_handler();
$errors = $GLOBALS['BufferedErrors'];
$GLOBALS['BufferedErrors'] = $bufferedErrorStack;
if (count($errors)>0) {
$ret.='<ul class="error">';
foreach ($errors as $error)
$ret.=
'<li>'.
'<b>'.$error->type.'</b>: '.
$error->message.
'<blockquote>'.
'<i>file</i>: '.$error->file.'<br />'.
'<i>line</i>: '.$error->line.
'</blockquote>'.
'</li>';
$ret.='</ul>';
}
return $ret;
}
I was seriously stuck trying to get marketing emails into a site so that the designer could edit them in Dreamweaver while my app could dynamically write and send them to customers. Then I discovered that this works - I barely believed how clever PHP could be! Hope this helps someone else.
<?php
class marketing_email{
function marketing_email($customer_id){
//---stuff to get customer details from DB-------
//----stuff---
//I'm going to put 'newpart-' at the beginning and 'a' at the end of the separator string
//I find that the 'a' is more reliable for a line end when it arrives at the client computer
$random_hash = md5(date('r', time()));
ob_start(); //Turn on output buffering
?>
--newpart-<?php echo $random_hash; ?>a
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Dear <?php echo $customer_name ?>
Your New special offer Blah Blah
--newpart-<?php echo $random_hash; ?>a
Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
<head>
<style type="text/css">
<!--
p {
font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
etc etc
}
-->
</style>
<title>Offer</title>
</head>
<body>
Blah Blah Blah
</body>
--newpart-<?php echo $random_hash; ?>a--
<?php
$pagecontent=ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
//define the headers we want passed. Note that they are separated with \r\n
$mail_headers = "MIME-Version: 1.0\r\nFrom: admin@domain.co.uk\r\nReply-To: admin@domain.co.uk";
//add boundary string and mime type specification
$mail_headers .= "\r\nContent-Type: multipart/alternative;\r\n\tboundary=\"newpart-".$random_hash."a\"";
$to=$customer_email;
if(mail($to,"Offer",$pagecontent,$mail_headers)){
return TRUE;
}else{
return FALSE;
}
}
} ?>
Hello,
I wrote a pretty simple, yet very effective page caching script using output buffering.
Just one of the uses for such a collection of functions.
http://www.coderprofile.com/source-code/170/simple-page-caching
Kind regards,
Scott
Referring to dan at roteloftet dot com's comment:
RFC 2616 (HTTP) specifies a "transparent" Content-Encoding, "identity" (§ 3.5), that nicely suits what you tried to do with the (invalid) "None". So this equally working, and it's also RFC-compliant:
<?php
header('Content-Encoding: identity', true);
?>
Some web hosting servers (mine do, at least) have in their php.ini the following setting:
output_handler = ob_gzhandler
This proved problematic for php-scripts which returns an image or a binary file in general, since there is no way to determine the content length of the compressed file.
Since I spent a lot of time scouring the net searching for a work-around (.htaccess-modifications were out of the picture for various reasons), I found this to work nicely to cancel out the ob_gzhandler specified in the php.ini:
<?php
while (ob_get_level())
ob_end_clean();
header("Content-Encoding: None", true);
?>
Put this at the top of the script before anything else is written to the page, and the script result will not be compressed.
Here's a simple way, using register_shutdown_function, to easily maintain your global output filter:
File: outputfilter.inc.php
<?php
initOutputFilter();
function initOutputFilter() {
ob_start('cbOutputFilter');
register_shutdown_function('ob_end_flush');
}
function cbOutputFilter($output) {
$search = array(
'user@domain.com',
'user2@domain.com',
);
$replace = array(
'<img src="/images/nospam001.jpg" border="0" alt="" />',
'<img src="/images/nospam002.jpg" border="0" alt="" />',
);
return str_replace($search, $replace, $output);
}
?>
Just include it in your global file, or in each file you want to filter.
This one in particular replaces any occurrence of "user@domain.com" or "user2@domain.com" with an image (that contains each email respectively), preventing spam bots from picking it up.
In regards to below. The best thing to do is create an error handler that catches all non-fatal errors prior and during your ob_start.
works for me all the time. and if there is an error you can format the errors in that script it executed in. From my experience i'm quite sure that would be the most logical choice. wouldn't it? Plus your using objects...Please do think before you can code.
Always plan else you'll be working blind. Anyways ob_start wouldn't exit;
Just plan ahead and anticipate. It's just like driving a car.. Happy new year.
As a follow up to my previous post :
(output seems to go to standard ouptput in command line mode even with the use of output buffering (ob_start) )
Setting implicit_flush to false seems to do the trick :
ini_set('implicit_flush',false); // (avoids output even with ob_start, in command line mode)
ob_start();
include (realpath(dirname(__FILE__))."/".$template);
$ret_str.=ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
ini_set('implicit_flush',true);
(See :
Chapter 43. Using PHP from the command line
)
Following clement dot ayme at st dot com 's remark :
In my experience it seems that the output IS buffered, but ALSO sent to the standard output !
Under certain freak conditions, when an error ocours perfoming an action on an object that cannot be done (either because the object does not exist or the method does not exist) inside of an ob_start() the script will exit and print everything the current function generates before the error, but nothing else, including no error message.
I am at a loss to why no error message appears and am trying to get a working example for the developers that is simpler than my whole program!
So if you are using ob_start() and you get no output, check your objects.... you have made a mistake on them somewhere. The only trouble is you will not know where as there is no error!!
When a script ends, all buffered output is flushed (this is not a bug: http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=42334&thanks=4). What happens when the script throws an error (and thus ends) in the middle of an output buffer? The script spits out everything in the buffer before printing the error!
Here is the simplest solution I have been able to find. Put it at the beginning of the error handling function to clear all buffered data and print only the error:
$handlers = ob_list_handlers();
while ( ! empty($handlers) ) {
ob_end_clean();
$handlers = ob_list_handlers();
}
ob_start() seems not compliant with command-line PHP.
just calling the function ahead of your unix-php script and nothing
happens. The STDOUT stream is not buffered.
Way to make all stdout and stderr write to a log
from *inside* a php script.
You simply need to make sure to call elog() every
once in awhile to get output.
It's a nice way to "daemonize" a script w.r.t. its logging.
// This allows us to capture all stdout and stderr (and error_log() calls)
// to this logfile...
// The "collected output" will be flushed anytime "elog()" is used...
ini_set("error_log", "/var/log/script.log");
ob_start();
function elog($str)
{
// get anything written to stdout or stderr that did *NOT* use elog()
// and write it now...
$writeme = ob_get_contents();
if ($writeme)
{
error_log($writeme);
ob_end_clean();
ob_start();
}
// now write message this method was called with
error_log($str);
}
Hi, I use those functions for stripping unnecessary chars in my output code...because I have JavaScript placed in outpout code so I don't remove \n\r\t but just replace them with single space (it could cause errors in scripts)
Function stripBufferSkipTextareaTags skips tags Textarea. It's needed to don't loose \n\r when user edit some content...
sorry for my english ;)
<?php
function stripBufferSkipTextareaTags($buffer){
$poz_current = 0;
$poz_end = strlen($buffer)-1;
$result = "";
while ($poz_current < $poz_end){
$t_poz_start = stripos($buffer, "<textarea", $poz_current);
if ($t_poz_start === false){
$buffer_part_2strip = substr($buffer, $poz_current);
$temp = stripBuffer($buffer_part_2strip);
$result .= $temp;
$poz_current = $poz_end;
}
else{
$buffer_part_2strip = substr($buffer, $poz_current, $t_poz_start-$poz_current);
$temp = stripBuffer($buffer_part_2strip);
$result .= $temp;
$t_poz_end = stripos($buffer, "</textarea>", $t_poz_start);
$temp = substr($buffer, $t_poz_start, $t_poz_end-$t_poz_start);
$result .= $temp;
$poz_current = $t_poz_end;
}
}
return $result;
}
function stripBuffer($buffer){
// change new lines and tabs to single spaces
$buffer = str_replace(array("\r\n", "\r", "\n", "\t"), ' ', $buffer);
// multispaces to single...
$buffer = ereg_replace(" {2,}", ' ',$buffer);
// remove single spaces between tags
$buffer = str_replace("> <", "><", $buffer);
// remove single spaces around
$buffer = str_replace(" ", " ", $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(" ", " ", $buffer);
return $buffer;
}
ob_start("stripBufferSkipTextareaTags");
?>
This function's behaviour has been changed in php 5.2.0:
<?
global $AP;
$AP = new ap;
ob_start("ob_end");
function ob_end() {
global $AP;
$r = $AP->test();
return $r;
}
class ap {
function test() {
return "debug";
}
}
?>
In older versions it shows: "debug".
But latest php version causes error: PHP Fatal error: Call to a member function test() on a non-object.
And this is not a bug: http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=40104
I use this to strip unnecessary characters from HTML output:
<?php
function sanitize_output($buffer)
{
$search = array(
'/\>[^\S ]+/s', //strip whitespaces after tags, except space
'/[^\S ]+\</s', //strip whitespaces before tags, except space
'/(\s)+/s' // shorten multiple whitespace sequences
);
$replace = array(
'>',
'<',
'\\1'
);
$buffer = preg_replace($search, $replace, $buffer);
return $buffer;
}
ob_start("sanitize_output");
?>
Just for simplicity's sake (and because I had to rewrite it for use at http://www.VideoSift.com anyway), here's a very simplified, pre-PHP5 version. Just add one call to dump_css_cache() for each of your CSS files.
<?php
ob_start('ob_gzhandler');
header('Content-Type: text/css; charset: UTF-8');
header('Cache-Control: must-revalidate');
$expire_offset = 0; // set to a reaonable interval, say 3600 (1 hr)
header('Expires: ' . gmdate('D, d M Y H:i:s', time() + $expire_offset) . ' GMT');
function css_compress($buffer) {
$buffer = preg_replace('!/\*[^*]*\*+([^/][^*]*\*+)*/!', '', $buffer);// remove comments
$buffer = str_replace(array("\r\n", "\r", "\n", "\t", ' '), '', $buffer);// remove tabs, spaces, newlines, etc.
$buffer = str_replace('{ ', '{', $buffer);// remove unnecessary spaces.
$buffer = str_replace(' }', '}', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace('; ', ';', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(', ', ',', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' {', '{', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace('} ', '}', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(': ', ':', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' ,', ',', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' ;', ';', $buffer);
return $buffer;
}
function dump_css_cache($filename) {
$cwd = getcwd() . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR;
$stat = stat($filename);
$current_cache = $cwd . '.' . $filename . '.' . $stat['size'] . '-' . $stat['mtime'] . '.cache';
// the cache exists - just dump it
if (is_file($current_cache)) {
include($current_cache);
return;
}
// remove any old, lingering caches for this file
if ($dead_files = glob($cwd . '.' . $filename . '.*.cache', GLOB_NOESCAPE))
foreach ($dead_files as $dead_file)
unlink($dead_file);
if (!function_exists('file_put_contents')) {
function file_put_contents($filename, $contents) {
$handle = fopen($filename, 'w');
fwrite($handle, $contents);
fclose($handle);
}
}
$cache_contents = css_compress(file_get_contents($filename));
file_put_contents($current_cache, $cache_contents);
echo $cache_contents;
}
dump_css_cache('_general.css');
?>
In extension to the compress() function posted below, here's a nifty little class that improves the idea a bit. Basically, running that compress() function for all your CSS for every single page load is clearly far less than optimal, especially since the styles will change only infrequently at the very worst.
With this class you can simply specify an array of your CSS file names and call dump_style(). The contents of each file are saved in compress()'d form in a cache file that is only recreated when the corresponding source CSS changes.
It's intended for PHP5, but will work identically if you just un-OOP everything and possibly define file_put_contents.
Enjoy!
<?php
$CSS_FILES = array(
'_general.css'
);
$css_cache = new CSSCache($CSS_FILES);
$css_cache->dump_style();
//
// class CSSCache
//
class CSSCache {
private $filenames = array();
private $cwd;
public function __construct($i_filename_arr) {
if (!is_array($i_filename_arr))
$i_filename_arr = array($i_filename_arr);
$this->filenames = $i_filename_arr;
$this->cwd = getcwd() . DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR;
if ($this->style_changed())
$expire = -72000;
else
$expire = 3200;
header('Content-Type: text/css; charset: UTF-8');
header('Cache-Control: must-revalidate');
header('Expires: ' . gmdate('D, d M Y H:i:s', time() + $expire) . ' GMT');
}
public function dump_style() {
ob_start('ob_gzhandler');
foreach ($this->filenames as $filename)
$this->dump_cache_contents($filename);
ob_end_flush();
}
private function get_cache_name($filename, $wildcard = FALSE) {
$stat = stat($filename);
return $this->cwd . '.' . $filename . '.' .
($wildcard ? '*' : ($stat['size'] . '-' . $stat['mtime'])) . '.cache';
}
private function style_changed() {
foreach ($this->filenames as $filename)
if (!is_file($this->get_cache_name($filename)))
return TRUE;
return FALSE;
}
private function compress($buffer) {
$buffer = preg_replace('!/\*[^*]*\*+([^/][^*]*\*+)*/!', '', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(array("\r\n", "\r", "\n", "\t", ' '), '', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace('{ ', '{', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' }', '}', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace('; ', ';', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(', ', ',', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' {', '{', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace('} ', '}', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(': ', ':', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' ,', ',', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' ;', ';', $buffer);
return $buffer;
}
private function dump_cache_contents($filename) {
$current_cache = $this->get_cache_name($filename);
// the cache exists - just dump it
if (is_file($current_cache)) {
include($current_cache);
return;
}
// remove any old, lingering caches for this file
if ($dead_files = glob($this->get_cache_name($filename, TRUE), GLOB_NOESCAPE))
foreach ($dead_files as $dead_file)
unlink($dead_file);
$compressed = $this->compress(file_get_contents($filename));
file_put_contents($current_cache, $compressed);
echo $compressed;
}
}
?>
I'm sure some of you more brilliant minds could pare this down some more, but using the method found at fiftyfoureleven.com for compressing, I got my 10090-byte stylesheet down to 3536 bytes and then again down to 2713 bytes, by stripping unecessary characters from the stylesheet. 2 ob_start calls and the CSS file is now 73% smaller. YMMV.
<?php
ob_start("ob_gzhandler");
ob_start("compress");
header("Content-type: text/css; charset: UTF-8");
header("Cache-Control: must-revalidate");
$off = 0; # Set to a reaonable value later, say 3600 (1 hr);
$exp = "Expires: " . gmdate("D, d M Y H:i:s", time() + $off) . " GMT";
header($exp);
function compress($buffer) {
$buffer = preg_replace('!/\*[^*]*\*+([^/][^*]*\*+)*/!', '', $buffer); // remove comments
$buffer = str_replace(array("\r\n", "\r", "\n", "\t", ' ', ' ', ' '), '', $buffer); // remove tabs, spaces, newlines, etc.
$buffer = str_replace('{ ', '{', $buffer); // remove unnecessary spaces.
$buffer = str_replace(' }', '}', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace('; ', ';', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(', ', ',', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' {', '{', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace('} ', '}', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(': ', ':', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' ,', ',', $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(' ;', ';', $buffer);
return $buffer;
}
require_once('screen.css');
require_once('layout.css');
require_once('custom.php');
require_once('titles.css');
require_once('bus.css');
?>
PHP Suggests: Some web servers (e.g. Apache) change the working directory of a script when calling the callback function. You can change it back by doing, for example, the following in the callback function: chdir(dirname($_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']))
The solution provided by PHP, does not function as intended when running PHP as a CGI (on CGI mode (CGI-BUILD (--enable-cgi) and/or CLI)). In such a case, PHP is executed as a CGI-BIN and the web server daemon (e.g. Apache) sees SCRIPT_FILENAME as being the PHPCGI processor, and won't look deeper to find what file the PHPCGI processor is actually running/parsing; therefore the path returned by SCRIPT_FILENAME is wrong (most of the time, containing/ending with "cgi-system/php.cgi").
As SCRIPT_FILENAME is the safest way to proceed, but turns to be wrong in this exact situation; PATH_TRANSLATED is the next safe solution one would turn towards since it is populated with a different mechanism.
It would be correct to develop in the direction if the script filename itself is contained in the SCRIPT_FILENAME path value, then the SCRIPT_FILENAME content is reported correctly. If it is not, using PATH_TRANSLATED is the next logical choice we can use. The best reference in this case would be PHP_SELF as it is populated by PHP itself. Using SCRIPT_NAME as a reference would be an error as it is affected by the same problem (reports cgi-system and/or php.cgi as well).
The following is the revised code and should work on both the non-CGI and the CGI PHP processor types.
<?php
chdir(dirname((strstr($_SERVER["SCRIPT_FILENAME"], $_SERVER["PHP_SELF"])
? $_SERVER["SCRIPT_FILENAME"] : $_SERVER["PATH_TRANSLATED"])));
?>
Or the decomposed code as follows:
<?php
if (strstr($_SERVER["SCRIPT_FILENAME"], $_SERVER["PHP_SELF"])) {
$reference = $_SERVER["SCRIPT_FILENAME"];
} else {
$reference = $_SERVER["PATH_TRANSLATED"];
}
chdir(dirname($reference);
?>
This has been tested on Apache 1 & 2, PHP 4 & 5 and IIS 5.1
simple code to make phpsession $_GET nice for Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional :)
function callback($buffer)
{
$buffer = str_replace("&PHPSESSID", "&PHPSESSID", $buffer);
return $buffer;
}
ob_start("callback");
session_start();
Hello firends
ob_start() opens a buffer in which all output is stored. So every time you do an echo, the output of that is added to the buffer. When the script finishes running, or you call ob_flush(), that stored output is sent to the browser (and gzipped first if you use ob_gzhandler, which means it downloads faster).
The most common reason to use ob_start is as a way to collect data that would otherwise be sent to the browser.
These are two usages of ob_start():
1-Well, you have more control over the output. Trivial example: say you want to show the user an error message, but the script has already sent some HTML to the browser. It'll look ugly, with a half-rendered page and then an error message. Using the output buffering functions, you can simply delete the buffer and sebuffer and send only the error message, which means it looks all nice and neat buffer and send
2-The reason output buffering was invented was to create a seamless transfer, from: php engine -> apache -> operating system -> web user
If you make sure each of those use the same buffer size, the system will use less writes, use less system resources and be able to handle more traffic.
With Regards, Hossein
One of the notes below mentions that ob_end_flush() is called automatically at the end of the script if you called ob_start without an ob_end.
Because I couldn't find any other way to do it, I tried to use this fact to have some stuff run at the end of every script. It was a maintenance nightmare, so I'm putting a link here to the good way to do it, since it's nigh impossible to find with google.
http://php.net/register_shutdown_function
Found that variables in class instances we're not being set after the call to ob_start().
Call ob_start after the variables are set however and it works but that didn't seem to solve the goal of a self contained templating class.
The fix was to assign the class by reference with '&new'
Here is a simplified working example:
<?php
class Buffer {
var $template = ' - template set in class constructor';
function Buffer() {
$this->startBuffer();
}
function startBuffer() {
ob_start(array(&$this, 'doFlush'));
}
function doFlush($buffer) {
/* simple string concat to show use of a
template string and the buffer output */
return $buffer . $this->template;
}
}
/* template does not get set:
$buffer1 = new Buffer();
$buffer1->template = ' - template set in instance';
echo 'some buffer content';
*/
/* this works as expected */
$buffer2 = &new Buffer();
$buffer2->template = ' - template set in instance';
echo 'some buffer content';
When you rely on URL rewriting to pass the PHP session ID you should be careful with ob_get_contents(), as this might disable URL rewriting completely.
Example:
ob_start();
session_start();
echo '<a href=".">self link</a>';
$data = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
echo $data;
In the example above, URL rewriting will never occur. In fact, rewriting would occur if you ended the buffering envelope using ob_end_flush(). It seems to me that rewriting occurs in the very same buffering envelope where the session gets started, not at the final output stage.
If you need a scenario like the one above, using an "inner envelope" will help:
ob_start();
ob_start(); // add the inner buffering envelope
session_start();
echo '<a href=".">self link</a>';
ob_end_flush(); // closing the inner envelope will activate URL rewriting
$data = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
echo $data;
In case you're interested or believe like me that this is rather a design flaw instead of a feature, please visit bug #35933 (http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=35933) and comment on it.
If you're trying to use ob_start() in some PHP5 classes (probably works on PHP4 classes), this is the good way :
<?
class HTMLPage
{
//----------------------------------------------------------------- PUBLIC
//----------------------------------------------------- Méthodes publiques
public static function ConvertIntoSGML( $source )
// Mode d'emploi :
//convertit une string en une SGML valide
//
// Renvoie :
//la chaine traitée
//
// Algorithme :
//analyse char par char de la chaine. Si un caractère est de nombre ASCII > 127,
//conversion en son code SGML.
{
$newString = '';
for( $i = 0; $i < strlen( $source ) ; $i++ ) {
$o = ord( $source{ $i } );
$newString .= ( ( $o > 127 ) ? '&#'.$o.';': $source{ $i } );
}
return $newString;
}
public function FlushSite( $source )
{
return $this->ConvertIntoSGML ( $source );
}
//-------------------------------------------- Constructeurs - destructeur
function __construct()
// Mode d'emploi (constructeur) :
//initialise la buffurisation
//
// Contrat :
//
{
ob_start( array ( & $this , 'FlushSite' ) );
} //---- Fin du constructeur
//------------------------------------------------------ Méthodes Magiques
//------------------------------------------------------------------ PRIVE
}
// Example :
$webdesign = new HTMLPage ( );
echo 'Héllo world'; // Will produce the source 'héllo world'
?>
Without the & before $this, you'll loose your content because ob_start() will call the flushsite() function from a clone of the object and not the caller object himself.
Note : call_back function must be public because ob_start() is in an extern scope from your class :)
I hope this will help you!
The following should be added: "If outbut buffering is still active when the script ends, PHP outputs it automatically. In effect, every script ends with ob_end_flush()."
If you want to run code in the middle of a string that you made, but you want to wait the printing...
(so if you want to allow php in bb-code style, and you want to execute it in order, and print everything in order...)
phpRun($code) {
ob_start();
exec($code);
$output = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
return $output;
}
$str = str_replace("]\n", "]", $str);
$match = array('#\[php\](.*?)\[\/php\]#se');
$replace = array( phpRun( stripslashes('$1') ) );
$str= preg_replace($match, $replace, $str);
echo $str;
Another way to make your code harder to copy, is to remove all line-breaks and tabs you have in it.
You can use this function to remove those.
You can choose to place "ob_start();" at the start of your main PHP-file, and "ob_end_clean();" at the end of it.
This is not the best solution though. If you are running Apache you might want to do something like this to a ".htaccess"-file:
php_value auto_prepend_file "/home/www/load_before.php"
php_value auto_append_file "/home/www/load_after.php"
(you should replace those files with files that actually exists).
In the "load_before.php" you can place the "ob_start();", and in the "load_after.php" you can do something like this:
<?
$html = strtr(ob_get_contents(), array("\t" => "", "\n" => "", "\r" => ""));
ob_end_clean();
echo $html;
?>
This will clean your HTML of all kind of linebreaks (both \n and \r) and tabulators (\t). This will save your users some bandwidth, but it will also make your HTML, JavaScripts and more very difficult to read or copy. That way, making it harder for people to steal your code if you do not want them to.
This isnt in the spirit of OpenSource, but anyway you should be aware that this is possible.
Be aware that if you use PHP-files, to simulate pictures, all linebreaks will also be remove, making them corrupt. A solution to this, could be to check the headers (Content-Type), and if isnt set, or it is "text/html", you can go ahead and remove the linebreaks and tabs.
At my site, with more than 50.000 pictures and about 60 people online, I couldnt see any difference in the loadtime.
But still be aware, that your output will not be sent, before the script is finished, which will make your page slower to load that way also, since it cannot send any output while loading, but will have to wait until the load is finished.
When using a callback with ob_start(), functions like ob_get_contents() don't make use of it, use ob_end_flush() instead.
nb: not tested with every ob_* functions, just ob_get_contents() and ob_end_flush()
I usually create my pages in four parts - variable initialisation, import header (using the variables just declared to configure), main body (mostly non-PHP), import footer. I wondered about making the main body examinable by another PHP script if the main page was included into it. I found I could control output of the main body by ending the header with an unclosed function which finishes at the start of the footer, thus enclosing the main body. Output buffering can then be used to read this into a variable. As a demonstration of how this can be used to control the order of output look at this example:
<?php
$output = "";
// Callback to process buffered output
function capture($buffer)
{
$GLOBALS['output'] .= $buffer;
return "C ";
}
// Calls the printE() function with output capture
function captureE()
{
ob_start("capture");
printE();
ob_end_flush();
}
?>
A
<?php
// Output 'E' (the main body in the example scenario)
function printE()
{ // (End header after this line) ?>
E
<?php // (Start footer with this line)
}
?>
B
<?php captureE(); ?>
D
<?php print $output; ?>
F
<?php printE(); ?>
G
The output is A B C D E F E G.
For the application I mentioned above there are two points to note:
- The page when executed alone must output its main body but the inspection script should suppress this, perhaps by means of a variable set before the page is included and then checked for in the footer output lines.
- Because the main body is now inside a function it has a different namespace, thus changes may be required to prevent code breaking (e.g. use of globals, handling of functions defined within the main body).
These are handy. First one has been mentioned before.
ob_start( array( 'lib_class', 'parse_output' ) );
ob_start( array( $this, 'parse_output' ) );
Note: $this is NOT a reference. Anything the callback saves or logs disappears in the clone ob_start works with.
It does enable the callback to work with the attributes of $this, like $this->ar_tpl_value or whatever your style is.
The manual says:
"If the optional parameter chunk_size is passed, the callback function is called on every first newline after chunk_size bytes of output. The output_callback parameter may be bypassed by passing a NULL value."
This doesn't work with my 4.3.11. Might be the Zend optimizer though. Daren't turn it off to go see.
This function dynamically changes title of HTML page:
function change_title($new_title) {
$output = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$output = preg_replace("/<title>(.*?)<\/title>/", "<title>$new_title</title>", $output);
echo $output;
}
Example:
ob_start();
// ... some output
change_title('NEW TITLE!');
This code demonstrates the affect of providing a value to the chunk_size parameter. A value of 1 or 0 will be ignored by php. Here's the Code:
<?
function callback($buffer)
{
return "TRAPPED:".$buffer."<br/>";
}
ob_start("callback",2);
echo "long string, so callback";
echo "X";
echo " - no callback, less than 2 chars";
?>newlines,
but
no
callback
!<?
// PHP block
?>PHP block initiates callback.<?
echo "One more callback at EOF...";
?>
The code above outputs:
TRAPPED:long string, so callback
TRAPPED:X - no callback, less than 2 chars
TRAPPED:newlines, but no callback !
TRAPPED:PHP block initiates callback.
TRAPPED:One more callback at EOF...
TRAPPED:
If you're trying to include a php file inside a loop by require_once (in example, a dinamic email template) and change the value of some variables (in example, url to unsuscribe, different for each user), you should use
<?php
// ... some code
$usermail = array("email1", "email2", ...);
for($i = 0; $i < $MAX; $i++)
{
$usermail_unsuscribe = $usermail[$i];
ob_start();
include("email_template.php");
ob_clean();
}
?>
Otherwise $usermail_unsuscribe will get only "email1" value.
I don't claim to understand this--I would have expected the exact opposite--but it seems that
ob_start() ... ob_end_flush()
can massively improve perfomance, by at least a factor of 10 (admittedly a small number of samples).
I tried this after discovering that I could move a large (100ms) bottleneck in one of my scripts into
echo "<!-- about 40 characters of junk -->";
which clearly shouldn't have taken long to run.
My unfounded theory is that without buffering, the interaction between PHP4.3.4 and Apache is not optimized, whereas with buffering, PHP delivers the entire page at once, which Apache handles better.
I should add that this is under https.
You can use PHP to generate a static HTML page. Useful if you have a complex script that, for performance reasons, you do not want site visitors to run repeatedly on demand. A "cron" job can execute the PHP script to create the HTML page. For example:
<?php // CREATE index.html
ob_start();
/* PERFORM COMLEX QUERY, ECHO RESULTS, ETC. */
$page = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$cwd = getcwd();
$file = "$cwd" .'/'. "index.html";
@chmod($file,0755);
$fw = fopen($file, "w");
fputs($fw,$page, strlen($page));
fclose($fw);
die();
?>
I use this function for deleting not needed characters within the html code before sending the whole stuff to the browser.
function callback($buffer){
$buffer = str_replace("\n", "", $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace("\t", "", $buffer);
$buffer = str_replace(chr(13), "", $buffer);
$buffer = ereg_replace("<!\-\- [\/\ a-zA-Z]* \-\->", "", $buffer);
return $buffer;
}
First str_replace will delete any newlines, second any tabs and the third any carriage return. Finally the regular expression will delete any html-comment which consists of /, space, a-z or A-Z.
Using this saves about 1kb on every pageload.
I've noticed a bug with MSIE for non cached contents if your page is less than 4096 octets : you have to refresh the page each time to view its content !
Here is the solution to prevent this stupid behaviour of MSIE : just insert this code at the top of your scripts :
function ob_callback($buffer)
{
return $buffer . str_repeat(' ', max(0, 4097 - strlen($buffer)));
}
ob_start('ob_callback');
My callback is stored in a function class, and using ob_start ('Class::callback') wasn't working. Not wanting to instantiate the class (no need, it's a function class) I tried this and it worked a charm:
ob_start (array (Class, 'callback'));
PHP 4.3.4
I wanted to do things a very particular way with output buffering and shutdown functions; using register_shutdown_function instead of the built in callback feature of this function. However, one should note that this won't work, because the contents of the buffer are no longer in scope when PHP is calling the shutdown functions. This would have been easy to see EXCEPT that PHP graciously flushes any unsent buffers at the end of the script, or when calling exit. So:
<?php
ob_start();
echo 'hi';
exit;
?>
Prints "hi". In a nutshell, if you want it to have a shutdown function that handles an output buffer, just specify it in ob_start() and let PHP automatically call it at the end of the script.
If ob_start does not seem to be working for you, note that with Apache 2 the flush() function causes PHP to send headers regardless of whether ob_start had been called before flush.
ob_start();
echo 'test';
flush();
will cause Apache 2 to send whatever headers may be stacked up - which means you can't use a header(location:xxx) after the flush. To fix, remove the flush(). Spent several hours discovering this. Apache 1.x didn't work this way.
If you're using object-orientated code in PHP you may, like me, want to use a call-back function that is inside an object (i.e. a class function). In this case you send ob_start a two-element array as its single argument. The first element is the name of the object (without the $ at the start), and the second is the function to call. So to use a function 'indent' in an object called '$template' you would use <?php ob_start(array('template', 'indent')); ?>.
Note that the current working directory changes in the callback procedure (Changed from htdocs\ to windows\system32\ on my system).
You have to use absolut paths if you want to open files on your local system.
Output Buffering even works in nested scopes or might be applied in recursive structures... thought this might save someone a little time guessing and testing :)
<pre><?php
ob_start(); // start output buffer 1
echo "a"; // fill ob1
ob_start(); // start output buffer 2
echo "b"; // fill ob2
$s1 = ob_get_contents(); // read ob2 ("b")
ob_end_flush(); // flush ob2 to ob1
echo "c"; // continue filling ob1
$s2 = ob_get_contents(); // read ob1 ("a" . "b" . "c")
ob_end_flush(); // flush ob1 to browser
// echoes "b" followed by "abc", as supposed to:
echo "<HR>$s1<HR>$s2<HR>";
?></pre>
... at least works on Apache 1.3.28
Nandor =)
IE 55. sp2 and IE6 as on the date of adding this note have problems with content type gzip and caching http headers. The pages are never cached. I think this combination of http headers can also crash the browser.
see http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;321722
If you're using Apache (1.3x or 2.0), you might consider adding automatic compression capability to your delivered pages.
I assume you all know how to build compression classes and use them in your programs, but none has yet to offer the speed and robustness of a binary-compiled module. Furthermore, such modules also log the "compressable" hit in the web log file, thus allowing your favorite web anaysing program to show you reports of bandwidth saved.
Having said that, you might consider the following two modules for Apache:
1) Apache 1.3x: use mod_gzip, available from:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mod-gzip/
2) Apache 2.x: use mod_gz, see here:
http://www.mail-archive.com/dev@httpd.apache.org/msg00734.html
3) Apache 1.3x: you may also want to use mod_defalte, from:
ftp://ftp.lexa.ru/pub/apache-rus/contrib/
Hope it helps.
good article on output buffering on devshed:
http://www.devshed.com/c/a/PHP/Output-Buffering-With-PHP