Now PHP supports data: protocol w/out "//" like data:text/plain, not data://text/plain,
I tried it.
Data (RFC 2397)
The data: (» RFC 2397) stream wrapper is available since PHP 5.2.0.
Example #1 Print data:// contents
<?php
// prints "I love PHP"
echo file_get_contents('data://text/plain;base64,SSBsb3ZlIFBIUAo=');
?>
Example #2 Fetch the media type
<?php
$fp = fopen('data://text/plain;base64,', 'r');
$meta = stream_get_meta_data($fp);
// prints "text/plain"
echo $meta['mediatype'];
?>
| Attribute | Supported |
|---|---|
| Restricted by allow_url_fopen | No |
| Restricted by allow_url_include | Yes |
| Allows Reading | Yes |
| Allows Writing | No |
| Allows Appending | No |
| Allows Simultaneous Reading and Writing | No |
| Supports stat() | No |
| Supports unlink() | No |
| Supports rename() | No |
| Supports mkdir() | No |
| Supports rmdir() | No |
Data (RFC 2397)
sandaimespaceman at gmail dot com
07-Sep-2008 01:30
07-Sep-2008 01:30
togos00 at gmail dot com
08-Apr-2008 07:56
08-Apr-2008 07:56
Note that the official data URI scheme does not include a double slash after the colon - that you must include it when making calls to PHP is an artifact of the designers' misunderstanding of URL syntax.
To automatically convert proper data URIs to ones understood by PHP, you can use code such as the following:
function convertUriForPhp( $uri ) {
if( preg_match('/^data:(?!\\/\\/)(.*)$/',$uri,$bif) ) {
return 'data://' . $bif[1];
} else {
return $uri;
}
}
