ID: 44019 Updated by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reported By: petr at hroch dot info Status: Assigned Bug Type: Filesystem function related Operating System: * PHP Version: 5.3CVS-2008-02-01 (snap) Assigned To: jani New Comment:
Hold your horses, I have a fix already, just waiting for commit.. Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2008-02-04 11:54:03] petr at hroch dot info I've used this syntax in 5.x versions till now. I got most suggestions and ideas from official documentation and comment discussion http://php.net/manual/en/function.parse-ini-file.php Maybe it's good idea to post there the new syntax usage change for versions >= 5.3 before it's officially changed in documentation on php5.3 stable release. Regards Petr ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2008-02-04 10:48:30] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Ah, now I see. I didn't have any machine to test with during the weekend so I got it wrong way. :D In 5.3 the ini parsing has been improved, and along the line I broke some old stuff which I actually didn't think anyone relied upon. I have to investigate and check if it's possible even to keep this old (and bad) syntax. Is it even documented anywhere? ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2008-02-03 15:26:07] petr at hroch dot info Hello Jani, Before I've submited this bug, I've tested this feature in php-5.2.5 where line foo=FOO"barian" returns [foo] => barbarian so it works gracefully, in php5.3-dev it doesn't. In my example FOO is a constant defined before parse_ini_file function. In your example $FOO is undefined global variable isn't it? Anyway changing ini file using your way doesn't work as expected, even if there's no $FOO definition I should be expecting that foo="{$FOO}barian" returns [foo] => barian not [foo] => FOO}barian modified Test.ini using Jani's solution ------------------------------------- [Topic] number=1 string="test" foo="{$FOO}barian" PHP code: -------- <? define("FOO","bar"); print_r(parse_ini_file("test.ini",true)); ?> Expected result: ---------------- Array ( [Topic] => Array ( [number] => 1 [string] => test [foo] => barbarian ) ) Actual Result: -------------- Array ( [Topic] => Array ( [number] => 1 [string] => test [foo] => FOO}barian ) ) I Hope it helps. Best regards Petr ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2008-02-02 20:22:34] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Where did you get the idea that that should work in the first place? The correct way: foo="{$FOO}barian" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2008-02-01 23:15:50] petr at hroch dot info Description: ------------ Quoted strings in parse_ini_file function are not handled properly Tested on Windows XP SP2 php5.3-dev running as apache 2.2.6 module possibly not working on the other operation systems I've searched the web and I've found the same problem already described php6.0-dev snapshot http://groups.google.pl/group/mailing.www.php-dev/msg/e5b4b179d4d3ce15 Reproduce code: --------------- Ini file test.ini content: -------------------------- [Topic] number=1 string="test" foo=FOO"barian" PHP code test.php: ------------------ <? define("FOO","bar"); print_r(parse_ini_file("test.ini",true)); ?> Expected result: ---------------- Array ( [Topic] => Array ( [number] => 1 [string] => test [foo] => barbarian ) ) Actual result: -------------- Warning: syntax error, unexpected TC_QUOTED_STRING in test.ini on line 3 in D:\htdocs\test.php on line 3 Array ( ) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=44019&edit=1