views:

615

answers:

3

Is there an existing way to parse the HTTP_RANGE header correctly in PHP? Thought I'd ask here before re-inventing the wheel.

I am currently using

preg_match('/bytes=(\d+)-(\d+)/', $_SERVER['HTTP_RANGE'], $matches);

to parse the header but that does not cover all possible values of the header so I am wondering if there is a function or library that can do this already?

Thanks in advance.

A: 

There's a snippet implementing HTTP range support on the fread() page:

http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.fread.php#84115

bluej100
A: 

Rather use regex to test it before sending a 416. Then just parse it by exploding on the comma , and the hyphen -. I also see that you used \d+ in your regex, but those are actually not required. When either of the range indexes is omitted, then it just means "first byte" or "last byte". You should cover that in your regex as well. Also see the Range header in the HTTP spec how you're supposed to handle it.

Kickoff example:

if (isset($_SERVER['HTTP_RANGE'])) {
    if (!preg_match('^bytes=\d*-\d*(,\d*-\d*)*$', $_SERVER['HTTP_RANGE'])) {
        header('HTTP/1.1 416 Requested Range Not Satisfiable');
        header('Content-Range: bytes */' . filelength); // Required in 416.
        exit;
    }

    $ranges = explode(',', substr($_SERVER['HTTP_RANGE'], 6));
    foreach ($ranges as $range) {
        $parts = explode('-', $range);
        $start = $parts[0]; // If this is empty, this should be 0.
        $end = $parts[1]; // If this is empty or greater than than filelength - 1, this should be filelength - 1.

        if ($start < $end) {
            header('HTTP/1.1 416 Requested Range Not Satisfiable');
            header('Content-Range: bytes */' . filelength); // Required in 416.
            exit;
        }

        // ...
    }
}
BalusC
Thanks, this worked perfectly!
Jason
You're welcome. Disclaimer: untested. This is less or more translated in head from my Java Servlet example here: http://balusc.blogspot.com/2009/02/fileservlet-supporting-resume-and.html
BalusC
+1  A: 

Taken from the PEAR Package HTTP_Download:

function getRanges()
{
    return preg_match('/^bytes=((\d*-\d*,? ?)+)$/', @$_SERVER['HTTP_RANGE'], $matches) ? $matches[1] : array();
}

It is also a good idea to use this packages for stuff like this!

powtac