headers_sent
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
headers_sent — ヘッダが既に送信されているかどうかを調べる
説明
ヘッダがすでに送信されているかどうかを調べます。
ヘッダブロックがいったん送信されてしまった後で header() 関数を使って新たなヘッダ行を送信することはできません。 この関数を使うには、少なくとも HTTP ヘッダ関連のエラーを予防する必要があります。 あるいは、出力バッファリング を使う方法もあります。
パラメータ
filename
-
オプション引数の
filename
とline
がセットされている場合、 PHP のソースファイル名と出力が開始された行番号が、それぞれfilename
とline
に格納されます。注意:
PHP のソースファイルを実行する前(たとえば、実行開始時にエラーが発生した場合) に出力が開始された場合、
filename
は空文字列になります。 line
-
出力を開始した行番号。
例
例1 headers_sent() 関数の使用例
<?php
// ヘッダがまだ何も送信されていない場合に、送信します
if (!headers_sent()) {
header('Location: http://www.example.com/');
exit;
}
// オプションのfileとlineパラメータの使用例
// $filename と $linenum が後で使用されていることに注目。
// これらの変数に事前に値を与えたりしてはいけません。
if (!headers_sent($filename, $linenum)) {
header('Location: http://www.example.com/');
exit;
// おそらく、ここでエラー処理を行うでしょう。
} else {
echo "$filename の $linenum 行目でヘッダがすでに送信されています。\n" .
"リダイレクトできません。代わりにこの <a " .
"href=\"http://www.example.com\">リンク</a> をクリックしてください。\n";
exit;
}
?>
注意
注意:
ヘッダにアクセスできたりヘッダを出力したりするのは、 それに対応した SAPI を使っている場合のみです。
参考
- ob_start() - 出力のバッファリングを有効にする
- trigger_error() - ユーザーレベルのエラー/警告/通知メッセージを生成する
- headers_list() - 送信した (もしくは送信される予定の) レスポンスヘッダの一覧を返す
- 関連する詳細な情報については header() - 生の HTTP ヘッダを送信する
+add a note
User Contributed Notes 7 notes
yesmarklapointe at hotmail dot com ¶
16 years ago
I was having trouble getting my mind around the concepts involved. Here is my dilemma and the conclusion I reached in case recounting them can help others:
I am using WAMPserver: PHP 5.2.6, and Apache 2.2.8 on Windows XP SP3. If it matters to your duplication,
I found two php.ini files in WAMPserver where output_buffering had been set to 4096. I changed them to OFF for this testing.
Here is how you can replicate what I am experiencing: With IE 7.0 go to Tools ... Display ieHTTPheaders ... and run the following script repeatedly and watch what happens:
<?php
header( 'Expires: Mon, 26 Jul 1998 05:00:00 GMT' );
//var_dump(headers_sent());
//print("whatever");
//flush();
//echo "whatever";
var_dump(headers_sent());
?>
Result: the final var_dump of the headers_sent() function will
always return FALSE unless any one or more of the commented lines above it are uncommented. Uncommenting the statements allows an output to be sent to the user not just to their browser, after which the final var_dump will return TRUE. What I found confusing was that the ieHTTPheaders tool shows that the header is being sent to the user's browser even when all the output lines are commented out. So why does headers_sent() return FALSE in this case? Because you can keep sending other headers. The headers_sent function is meant to alert one to when no further headers can be sent. My testing shows it does not return true unless some other output is also sent after the header, thereby signaling that "Headers have been sent and concluded with user output. NOW you can't send any more headers."
Someone else worked his way through this problem in a (false) bug report: http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=30264
Here is the relevant part of the reply from the pro:
"When you use compression the entire page is buffered in memory, until end of the request. Consequently you can send headers at any time because no data is being actually sent to user when you print it. Until PHP actually decides to send any page output to the user you can still send additional headers which is why the headers_sent() function is returning false. It will return true, indicating that headers have been sent only at a time when output began going to the user and you no longer can send any additional headers."
So in summary, my point is that there is a difference between headers being sent only to the browser (which can be followed by other headers) vs. headers being sent and concluded by output for the user. The function should have been given a more clear name like headers_concluded().
Jakob B. ¶
18 years ago
<?php
function redirect($filename) {
if (!headers_sent())
header('Location: '.$filename);
else {
echo '<script type="text/javascript">';
echo 'window.location.href="'.$filename.'";';
echo '</script>';
echo '<noscript>';
echo '<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;url='.$filename.'" />';
echo '</noscript>';
}
}
redirect('http://www.google.com');
?>
php at fufachew dot REMOVEME dot com ¶
20 years ago
RE: antti at haapakangas dot net's post
I've changed the code so $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'] is used if $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] is not set. $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'] doesn't meet my needs, but I suppose it's good to fall back on it. I've also fixed a problem in the meta refresh line - it was missing the "url=" part of the content attribute.
<?php
function server_url()
{
$proto = "http" .
((isset($_SERVER['HTTPS']) && $_SERVER['HTTPS'] == "on") ? "s" : "") . "://";
$server = isset($_SERVER['HTTP_HOST']) ?
$_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] : $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'];
return $proto . $server;
}
function redirect_rel($relative_url)
{
$url = server_url() . dirname($_SERVER['PHP_SELF']) . "/" . $relative_url;
if (!headers_sent())
{
header("Location: $url");
}
else
{
echo "<meta http-equiv=\"refresh\" content=\"0;url=$url\">\r\n";
}
}
?>
trevize (shtrudel) gmail.com ¶
19 years ago
Note that in IIS (or at least the version that comes with W2K server), the server seems to do some buffering, so even if you output someting or cause a warning, the value of headers_sent() may be false because the headers haven't been sent yet.
So it's not a safe way to know if warnings have been encountered in your script.
collectours at free dot fr ¶
17 years ago
In response to K.Tomono and alexrussell101 at gmail dot com :
Yes,
headers_sent() will return false, even if you sent something to the ouptut using print() or header() , if output_buffering is different from Off in you php.ini, and the length of what you sent does not exceed the size of output_buffering.
To test it, try this code with these values in php.ini
1) output_buffering=32
2) output buffering = 4096
[code]
<?php
echo "Yo<br />";
echo "Sent:",headers_sent(),"<br />";
echo "enough text to feed the buffer until it overflows ;-)<br />";
echo "Sent:",headers_sent(),"<br />";
?>
[/code]
then put
3) output buffering = Off
and try this code
[code]
<?php
echo "Yo<br />";
echo "Sent:",headers_sent(),"<br />";
?>
[/code]
which will this time unconditionnally say that headers were sent.
This is noticed in php.ini comment :
"Output buffering allows you to send header lines (including cookies) even after you send body content, in the price of slowing PHP's output layer a bit."
Note : This is completly independant of implicit_flush tuning.
rojasredes at gmail dot com ¶
6 years ago
Remember to save source code file *.php with UTF-8 without BOM.
If saved with UTF-8 BOM the next code allways return "true":
<?php
if headers_sent($source,$numline)
{
die("true");
}
else
{
die("false");
}
?>
Even when $numline is 1, and there is any character before <?php
and after ?>
Save file without BOM and everything will be ok, then.
Jase ¶
15 years ago
This is becoming annoying the amount of posts to try and describe the behaviour of headers
Headers appear first in the data sent to the user's browser
if headers have been called using the header() function but no data has been sent to the output buffer (using echo, readfile etc), then the headers are sent at the end of script execution otherwise they are sent when the buffer reaches it's limit and emptied
simple
this means that headers_sent() will return false if nothing is sent to the output buffer because the headers are being sent at the end of the script
This is not a bug either, this is expected behaviour. Keeping headers until forced to send them out is a good idea because certain measures can be taken like prevention of meta injection etc (option in header() to replace headers that have not yet been sent)
besides, headers_sent() is good for when you try and send headers but the output buffer has already been emptied (in cases of php error handling for example). Obviously if the buffer has emtpied, sending headers won't work.