I create a CSV file for download by our client using
$output = fopen('php://output', 'w');
and using fputcsv()
to write data to a CSV file which is downloaded by the client.
I am running PHP on Linux and consequently the line endings are not interpreted by many Windows applications.
I could write the CSV file to a directory on the server, read it back in and perform a str_replace()
from \n
to \r\n
, but this seems a rather clunky way of solving the problem. Is there a way to perform the conversion without creating a physical file?
You could use stream filters to accomplish this. This example writes to a physical file, but it should work fine for php://output
as well.
// filter class that applies CRLF line endings
class crlf_filter extends php_user_filter
{
function filter($in, $out, &$consumed, $closing)
{
while ($bucket = stream_bucket_make_writeable($in)) {
// make sure the line endings aren't already CRLF
$bucket->data = preg_replace("/(?<!\r)\n/", "\r\n", $bucket->data);
$consumed += $bucket->datalen;
stream_bucket_append($out, $bucket);
}
return PSFS_PASS_ON;
}
}
// register the filter
stream_filter_register('crlf', 'crlf_filter');
$f = fopen('test.csv', 'wt');
// attach filter to output file
stream_filter_append($f, 'crlf');
// start writing
fputcsv($f, array('1 1', '2 2'));
fclose($f);
Not sure if you can do this with PHP itself. There may be a way to change PHP's EOL for file writing, but it's probably system dependent. You don't have a windows system you could ping, do you? ;)
As for a real solution, instead of str_replace
line-by-line, you could use the Linux program unix2dos
(inverse of dos2unix
) assuming you have it installed:
fputcsv($fh ...)
exec("unix2dos " . escapeshellarg($filename));
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