This is a very irritating bug. You can use this to get around it though:
$data = 'some.test.string';
$phar = new PharData('test.tar');
$phar->compress(Phar::GZ, substr($data, strpos($data, '.') + 1));
(PHP 5 >= 5.3.0, PHP 7, PHP 8, PECL phar >= 2.0.0)
PharData::compress — Compresses the entire tar/zip archive using Gzip or Bzip2 compression
For tar archives, this method compresses the entire archive using gzip compression or bzip2 compression. The resulting file can be processed with the gunzip command/bunzip command, or accessed directly and transparently with the Phar extension.
For zip archives, this method fails with an exception. The zlib extension must be enabled to compress with gzip compression, the bzip2 extension must be enabled in order to compress with bzip2 compression.
In addition, this method automatically renames the archive, appending .gz
,
.bz2
or removing the extension if passed Phar::NONE
to
remove compression. Alternatively, a file extension may be specified with the second
parameter.
compression
Compression must be one of Phar::GZ
,
Phar::BZ2
to add compression, or Phar::NONE
to remove compression.
extension
By default, the extension is .tar.gz
or .tar.bz2
for compressing a tar, and .tar
for decompressing.
A PharData object is returned on success,
or null
on failure.
Throws BadMethodCallException if the zlib extension is not available, or the bzip2 extension is not enabled.
Version | Beschreibung |
---|---|
8.0.0 |
extension is now nullable.
|
Beispiel #1 A PharData::compress() example
<?php
$p = new PharData('/path/to/my.tar');
$p['myfile.txt'] = 'hi';
$p['myfile2.txt'] = 'hi';
$p1 = $p->compress(Phar::GZ); // copies to /path/to/my.tar.gz
$p2 = $p->compress(Phar::BZ2); // copies to /path/to/my.tar.bz2
$p3 = $p2->compress(Phar::NONE); // exception: /path/to/my.tar already exists
?>
This is a very irritating bug. You can use this to get around it though:
$data = 'some.test.string';
$phar = new PharData('test.tar');
$phar->compress(Phar::GZ, substr($data, strpos($data, '.') + 1));
This method destroys everything after the first dot in your filename and replaces it with the zip extension (.tar.gz, etc)
Example:
<?php
$tarfile = "2.5.0.0-RC1.tar";
$pd = new \PharData($tarfile);
$pd->buildFromDirectory("/path/to/contents");
$pd->compress(\Phar::GZ);
?>
Ends up with a file named "2.tar.gz"