As far as I am aware, php's getcwd()
(and similar functions eg dirname(__FILE__)
) are supposed to return the current directory of the file being executed.
If the current directory happens to be a symlink to another directory, php (presumably in conjunction with apache) is supposed to return the path showing the symlink name as the 'directory' you're in.
Example:
from /var/www,
directory 'one' contains index.php
symlink 'two' points at directory 'one'
one/index.php: <?php echo getcwd(); ?>
Accessing http://localhost/two/index.php in a browser shows /var/www/one
.
I would expect it to show /var/www/two
Does anyone know if this is a php or apache setting I can change? Or am I unable to use symlinks in this manner?
OK figured it out. Use $_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']
if over the browser. Over the command line, you can get the current symlinked directory using exec("pwd")
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