eval

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

evalAvalia uma string como código PHP

Descrição

eval(string $code): mixed

Avalia a string fornecida no parâmetro code como um código PHP.

O código a ser avaliado herda o escopo de variáveis da linha na qual a chamada a eval() ocorrer. Todas as variáveis disponíveis naquela linha estarão disponíveis para leitura e modificação no código avaliado. Entretanto, todas as funções e classes definidas serão definidas no espaço de nomes global. Em outras palavras, o compilador considera o código avaliado como se ele fosse um arquivo incluído separadamente.

Cuidado

A construção de linguagem eval() é bastante perigosa porque permite execução de código PHP arbitrário. Seu uso é contudo desencorajado. Se foi cuidadosamente verificado que não há outra opção a não ser usar esta construção, deve-se prestar atenção especial para não passar nenhum dado fornecido pelo usuário no parâmetro sem antes validá-lo.

Parâmetros

code

Código PHP válido a ser avaliado.

O código não pode ser envolvido em etiquetas PHP de abertura e de fechamento, isto é, 'echo "Hi!";' deve ser passado ao invés de '<?php echo "Hi!"; ?>'. Ainda é possível sair e re-entrar no modo PGP usando-se os marcadores apropriados, ex.: 'echo "In PHP mode!"; ?>In HTML mode!<?php echo "Back in PHP mode!";'.

Além disso, o código informado deve ser código PHP válido. Isto inclui o fato de que todas as instruções devem ser adequadamente terminadas com ponto-e-vírgula. 'echo "Hi!"' por exemplo causará um erro de avaliação, enquanto que 'echo "Hi!";' funcionará.

Uma instrução return irá terminar imediatamente a avaliação do código.

o código será executado no escopo do código que está chamando eval(). Todas as variáveis definidas ou alteradas na chamada a eval() permanecerão visíveis depois que ela terminar.

Valor Retornado

eval() retorna null a menos que return seja chamado no código avaliado, neste caso o valor passado a return será o retornado. A partir do PHP 7, se houver um erro de avaliação no código, eval() lança uma exceção ParseError. Antes do PHP 7, neste caso eval() retornava false e a execução do código seguinte continuava normalmente. Não é possível capturar um erro de avaliação em eval() usando set_error_handler().

Exemplos

Exemplo #1 Exemplo de eval() example - fusão simples de texto

<?php
$string
= 'cup';
$name = 'coffee';
$str = 'This is a $string with my $name in it.';
echo
$str. "\n";
eval(
"\$str = \"$str\";");
echo
$str. "\n";
?>

O exemplo acima produzirá:

This is a $string with my $name in it.
This is a cup with my coffee in it.

Notas

Nota: Como esta é uma construção da linguagem e não uma função, ela não pode ser chamada usando funções variáveis ou argumentos nomeados.

Dica

Assim como qualquer coisa que envia seu resultado diretamente para o navegador, as funções de controle de saída podem ser usadas para capturar a saída desta função e salvá-la em uma string, por exemplo.

Nota:

Em caso de erro fatal no código avaliado, todo o script é terminado.

Veja Também

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User Contributed Notes 20 notes

up
468
Anonymous
20 years ago
Kepp the following Quote in mind:

If eval() is the answer, you're almost certainly asking the
wrong question. -- Rasmus Lerdorf, BDFL of PHP
up
42
lord dot dracon at gmail dot com
9 years ago
Inception with eval()

<pre>
Inception Start:
<?php
eval("echo 'Inception lvl 1...\n'; eval('echo \"Inception lvl 2...\n\"; eval(\"echo \'Inception lvl 3...\n\'; eval(\'echo \\\"Limbo!\\\";\');\");');");
?>
up
22
Jeremie LEGRAND
7 years ago
At least in PHP 7.1+, eval() terminates the script if the evaluated code generate a fatal error. For example:
<?php
@eval('$content = (100 - );');
?>

(Even if it is in the man, I'm note sure it acted like this in 5.6, but whatever)
To catch it, I had to do:
<?php
try {
    eval(
'$content = (100 - );');
} catch (
Throwable $t) {
   
$content = null;
}
?>

This is the only way I found to catch the error and hide the fact there was one.
up
23
bohwaz
12 years ago
If you want to allow math input and make sure that the input is proper mathematics and not some hacking code, you can try this:

<?php

$test
= '2+3*pi';

// Remove whitespaces
$test = preg_replace('/\s+/', '', $test);

$number = '(?:\d+(?:[,.]\d+)?|pi|π)'; // What is a number
$functions = '(?:sinh?|cosh?|tanh?|abs|acosh?|asinh?|atanh?|exp|log10|deg2rad|rad2deg|sqrt|ceil|floor|round)'; // Allowed PHP functions
$operators = '[+\/*\^%-]'; // Allowed math operators
$regexp = '/^(('.$number.'|'.$functions.'\s*\((?1)+\)|\((?1)+\))(?:'.$operators.'(?2))?)+$/'; // Final regexp, heavily using recursive patterns

if (preg_match($regexp, $q))
{
   
$test = preg_replace('!pi|π!', 'pi()', $test); // Replace pi with pi function
   
eval('$result = '.$test.';');
}
else
{
   
$result = false;
}

?>

I can't guarantee you absolutely that this will block every possible malicious code nor that it will block malformed code, but that's better than the matheval function below which will allow malformed code like '2+2+' which will throw an error.
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7
catgirl at charuru dot moe
7 years ago
It should be noted that imported namespaces are not available in eval.
up
5
darkhogg (foo) gmail (bar) com
14 years ago
The following code

<?php
   
eval( '?> foo <?php' );
?>

does not throw any error, but prints the opening tag.
Adding a space after the open tag fixes it:

<?php
   
eval( '?> foo <?php ' );
?>
up
1
remindfwd
3 years ago
Note that

<?php

echo eval( '$var = (20 - 5);' );  // don't show anything

echo ' someString ' . eval( 'echo $var = 15;' ); // outputs 15 someString

//or
echo ' someString ' . eval( 'echo $var = 15;' ) . ' otherString '; // 15 someString  otherString 

//or
echo ' someString ' . eval( 'echo $var = 15;' ) . ' otherString ' . '...' .eval( 'echo " __ " . $var = 10;' ); // 15 __ 10 someString  otherString  ...

?>
up
2
divinity76 at gmail dot com
7 years ago
imo, this is a better eval replacement:

<?php
function betterEval($code) {
   
$tmp = tmpfile ();
   
$tmpf = stream_get_meta_data ( $tmp );
   
$tmpf = $tmpf ['uri'];
   
fwrite ( $tmp, $code );
   
$ret = include ($tmpf);
   
fclose ( $tmp );
    return
$ret;
}
?>

- why? betterEval follows normal php opening and closing tag conventions, there's no need to strip `<?php?>` from the source.  and it always throws a ParseError if there was a parse error, instead of returning false (note: this was fixed for normal eval() in php 7.0). - and there's also something about exception backtraces
up
0
xxixxek at gmail dot com
1 year ago
I happened to work on a very old code that, for many reasons, couldn't be rewritten and the only way of showing the exact error in eval that worked for me was:

$res = eval($somecode);

if(!$res) {
    echo "<pre>";
    print_r(explode(PHP_EOL, $somecode));
    echo "</pre>";
}

I know it is terrible but I didn't have much of a choice. None of the try...catch solutions worked for me; the solution above shows the exact lines with numbers and it is easy to find what's wrong with the code.
up
-1
xxixxek at gmail dot com
1 year ago
I happened to work on a very old code that, for many reasons, couldn't be rewritten and the only way of showing the exact error in eval that worked for me was:

$res = eval($somecode);

if(!$res) {
    echo "<pre>";
    print_r(explode(PHP_EOL, $somecode));
    echo "</pre>";
}

I know it is terrible but I didn't have much of a choice. None of the try...catch solutions worked for me; the solution above shows the exact lines with numbers and it is easy to find what's wrong with the code.
up
0
stocki dot r at gmail dot com
2 years ago
You can use `eval()` to combine classes/traits dynamically with anonymus classes:

<?php

function init($trait, $class) {
    return (
trait_exists($trait) && class_exists($class))
        ? eval(
"return new class() extends {$class} { use {$trait}; };")
        :
false;
}

trait
Edit {
    function
hello() { echo 'EDIT: ' . $this->modulename; }
}
trait
Ajax {
    function
hello() { echo 'AJAX: ' . $this->modulename; }
}
class
MyModule {
    public
$modulename = 'My Module';
}
class
AnotherModule {
    public
$modulename = 'Another Module';
}

init('Edit', 'MyModule')->hello();      # 'EDIT: My Module'
init('Ajax', 'AnotherModule')->hello(); # 'AJAX: Another Module'

?>
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1
Karel
9 years ago
For them who are facing syntax error when try execute code in eval,


<?php

$str
'<?php echo "test"; ?>';

eval(
'?>'.$str.'<?php;'); // outputs test
eval('?>'.$str.'<?'); // outputs test
eval('?>'.$str.'<?php');// throws syntax error - unexpected $end

?>
up
0
solobot
7 years ago
eval() is workaround for generating multiple anonymous classes with static properties in loop

public function generateClassMap()
    {
        foreach ($this->classMap as $tableName => $class)
        {
            $c = null;
            eval('$c = new class extends \common\MyStaticClass {
                public static $tableName;
                public static function tableName()
                {
                    return static::$tableName;
                }
            };');
            $c::$tableName = $this->replicationPrefix.$tableName;
            $this->classMap[$tableName] = $c;

        }
    }

thus every class will have its own $tableName instead of common ancestor.
up
0
php at rijkvanwel dot nl
14 years ago
To catch a parse error in eval()'ed code with a custom error handler, use error_get_last() (PHP >= 5.2.0).

<?php
$return
= eval( 'parse error' );

if (
$return === false && ( $error = error_get_last() ) ) {
   
myErrorHandler( $error['type'], $error['message'], $error['file'], $error['line'], null );

   
// Since the "execution of the following code continues normally", as stated in the manual,
    // we still have to exit explicitly in case of an error
   
exit;
}
?>
up
-1
Uther
8 years ago
eval'd code within namespaces which contain class and/or function definitions will be defined in the global namespace... not incredibly obvious :/
up
-2
php at stock-consulting dot com
16 years ago
Magic constants like __FILE__ may not return what you expect if used inside eval()'d code. Instead, it'll answer something like "c:\directory\filename.php(123) : eval()'d code" (under Windows, obviously, checked with PHP5.2.6) - which can still be processed with a function like preg_replace to receive the filename of the file containing the eval().

Example:

<?php
$filename
= preg_replace('@\(.*\(.*$@', '', __FILE__);
echo
$filename;
?>
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-1
greald at gmail dot com
3 years ago
to avoid the evil eval() you may use the fact that function names, variable names, property names and method names can be handled strings.

<?php
class Fruit
{
    public
$tomato = "Tomatos";

    public function
red() {return " are red. ";}
}

$fruit = new Fruit;
$fruitStr = "tomato";
$colorStr = "red";

echo
$fruit->$fruitStr . $fruit->$colorStr();

// and procedural  //////////////////////////////////////////

$lemon = "Lemons";

function
yellow() {return " are yellow. ";}

$fruitStr = "$lemon";
$colorStr = "yellow";

echo
$fruitStr . $colorStr();
?>
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-2
Patanjali
2 years ago
eval() is useful for preprocessing css (and js) with php to embed directly into a style tag in the head tag (or script tag at the bottom of body tag) of the HTML of the page.

This:

a. Prevents Flash of White in Chrome or Firefox (where an external css file arrives briefly too late to render the HTML).

b. Allows radical minifying by testing the page source to see if whole blocks of rules or code are even required, such as for tables.

c. Allows custom source-content-dependent css rules to be created on the fly. (I use this to create rules for positioned labels over an image that scale with it)

d. Allows generation of a hash of the processed css or js for use in the page's CSP header for style-src or script-src to prevent injection attacks.

Here eval() is safe because it is not using user-supplied (person or browser) information
up
-13
Ipseno at yahoo dot com
16 years ago
If you attempt to call a user defined function in eval() and .php files are obfuscated by Zend encoder, it will result in a fatal error.

Use a call_user_func() inside eval() to call your personal hand made functions.

This is user function
<?php

function square_it($nmb)
{
    return
$nmb * $nmb;
}

?>

//Checking if eval sees it?
<?php

$code
= var_export( function_exists('square_it') );

eval(
$code );    //returns TRUE - so yes it does!

?>

This will result in a fatal error:
PHP Fatal error:  Call to undefined function square_it()
<?php

$code
= 'echo square_it(55);' ;

eval(
$code );

?>

This will work
<?php

$code
= 'echo call_user_func(\'square_it\', 55);' ;

eval(
$code );

?>
up
-11
marco at harddisk dot is-a-geek dot org
16 years ago
eval does not work reliably in conjunction with global, at least not in the cygwin port version.

So:
<?PHP
class foo {
 
//my class...
}
function
load_module($module) {
  eval(
"global \$".$module."_var;");
  eval(
"\$".$module."_var=&new foo();");
 
//various stuff ... ...
}
load_module("foo");
?>

becomes to working:

<?PHP
class foo {
 
//my class...
}
function
load_module($module) {
  eval(
'$GLOBALS["'.$module.'_var"]=&new foo();');
 
//various stuff ... ...
}
load_module("foo");
?>

Note in the 2nd example, you _always_ need to use $GLOBALS[$module] to access the variable!
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