ob_clean

(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7)

ob_cleanClean (erase) the output buffer

Descrierea

ob_clean ( ) : bool

This function discards the contents of the output buffer.

This function does not destroy the output buffer like ob_end_clean() does.

The output buffer must be started by ob_start() with PHP_OUTPUT_HANDLER_CLEANABLE flag. Otherwise ob_clean() will not work.

Valorile întoarse

Întoarce valoarea true în cazul succesului sau false în cazul eșecului.

A se vedea și

  • ob_flush() - Flush (send) the output buffer
  • ob_end_flush() - Flush (send) the output buffer and turn off output buffering
  • ob_end_clean() - Clean (erase) the output buffer and turn off output buffering

add a note add a note

User Contributed Notes 5 notes

up
25
meustrus
10 years ago
@cornel: It's easy enough to say "Don't do that" when you think you've got the person right in front of you. But one doesn't always have the original coder, or even one of a dozen of the original coders. Are you really suggesting that it would be wrong to use this function as a band-aid when the alternative may be looking through hundreds of source files you didn't write for errors you didn't introduce?

To your point, though, it is (or should be) a commonly accepted best practice to not put closing PHP tags at the end of files. When, however, enforcing that would take a time machine, it's appropriate to use ob_clean() as a band-aid to make dynamically generated images work as expected.
up
16
lev at taintedthoughts dot com
17 years ago
I find this function incredibly useful when manipulating or creating images in php (with GD).

I spent quite a while searching through a large number of included files to find where I had a undesired space after php's ending tag - as this was causing all my images on the fly to break due to output already being set. Even more annoying was that this was not caught not php's error reporting so there was no reference to the problem line(s) in my log file. I don't know why error reporting wouldn't catch this since it was set to accept warnings, and the same thing had been caught in the past.

Nevertheless, I never did find the line(s) that were adding extra spaces or new lines before my images were being generated, but what I did instead was add this handy function right before my image manipulation code and right after the include/require code.

For example:

<?php

// require some external library files
require ("lib/somelibrary.php");
require (
"lib/class/someclass.php");

// clean the output buffer
ob_clean();

// simple test image
header("Content-type: image/gif");
$im = imagecreate (100, 50);
imagegif($im);
imagedestroy($im);

?>

While this may seem trivial a trivial use of the function, it in fact is incredibly useful for insuring no extra spaces or new lines have already been output while making images in php. As many of you probably already know, extra lines, spacing and padding that appears prior to image-code will prevent the image from being created. If the file "lib/somelibrary.php" had so much as an extra new line after the closing php tag then it would completely prevent the image from working in the above script.

If you work on an extremely large project with a lot of source and required files, like myself, you will be well-advised to always clear the output buffer prior to creating an image in php.
up
15
cornel at scoalaweb dot com
11 years ago
Don't use ob_clean() to clear white-space or other unwanted content "accidentally" generated by included files.
Included files should not generate unwanted content in the first place.
If they do, You are doing something wrong, like inserting white-space after "?>" (there should not be a "?>" at the end of PHP files: http://php.net/manual/en/language.basic-syntax.phptags.php ).
up
2
alexander at mralexander dot ca
10 years ago
In case there is nothing output yet to the buffer and then implementing the ob_clean() a (soft) error notice would be generated such as the following:

Notice: ob_clean() [ref.outcontrol]: failed to delete buffer. No buffer to delete. in [file-path]

you could do a simple check with "ob_get_contents()" to make sure that there is anything in the buffer.
up
-7
ngoc dot lo dot dang at gmail dot com
7 years ago
Note that ob_clean() and ob_end_clean() do not clean header sent with header()
To Top