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views:

94

answers:

1

hey all, I have the following snippet of php code

if($fp = fopen($url, 'r')) {
    stream_set_timeout($fp, 1); 
    stream_set_blocking($fp, 0);

}
$info = stream_get_meta_data($fp);

I'd like the request to timeout after 1 second... if I put a sleep(20) in my $url that I'm reading it just waits the whole 20 seconds and never times out. Is there a better way to do timeouts with fopen?

If I use ini_set('default_socket_timeout',2); above that code it times out properly but $info then becomes null so ideally I'd like to use the stream functions.

thanks

A: 

You can use stream_context_create() and the http context option timeout
But fopen() will still return false if a timeout occurs and stream_get_meta_data() won't work.

$url = 'http://...';
$context = stream_context_create( array(
  'http'=>array(
    'timeout' => 2.0
  )
));
$fp = fopen($url, 'r', false, $context);
if ( !$fp ) {
  echo '!fopen';
}
else {
  $info = stream_get_meta_data($fp);
  var_dump($info);
}
VolkerK
the only issue with that is that context's weren't added until php5 and the code I'm writing unfortunately needs to be php4 compatible :(
The manual says PHP 4.3.0 so you should be good to go,http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.stream-context-create.php
Steve-o