I made a solution that I think is best. I must confess that the primary reason for using the getimagesize() function was to get the MIME type of the file (to ensure it is an image). Obtaining the size is an added bonus, but I could have just as easily framed the question around the exif_imagetype() function. The problem would have been the same, because both functions only accept a file name; not file contents.
So what I did was basically look in the PHP sourcecode and see how exif_imagetype() read MIME information. It turns out it only reads the first 12 bytes of the file. I replicated its functionality like so:
function GetConstMimeArray()
{
// MIME type markers (taken from PHP sourcecode consts in \ext\standard\image.c starting at line 39).
return array
(
'gif' => array(ord('G'), ord('I'), ord('F')),
'psd' => array(ord('8'), ord('B'), ord('P'), ord('S')),
'bmp' => array(ord('B'), ord('M')),
'swf' => array(ord('F'), ord('W'), ord('S')),
'swc' => array(ord('C'), ord('W'), ord('S')),
'jpg' => array(0xff, 0xd8, 0xff),
'png' => array(0x89, 0x50, 0x4e, 0x47, 0x0d, 0x0a, 0x1a, 0x0a),
'tif_ii' => array(ord('I'), ord('I'), 0x2a, 0x00),
'tif_mm' => array(ord('M'), ord('M'), 0x00, 0x2a),
'jpc' => array(0xff, 0x4f, 0xff),
'jp2' => array(0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x0c, 0x6a, 0x50, 0x20, 0x20, 0x0d, 0x0a, 0x87, 0x0a),
'iff' => array(ord('F'), ord('O'), ord('R'), ord('M')),
'ico' => array(0x00, 0x00, 0x01, 0x00)
);
}
And
// Get an array of known MIME headers.
$MimeTypeConsts = GetConstMimeArray();
// Get first 12 bytes of file from stream to do a MIME check.
$File = file_get_contents('php://input', null, null, 0, 12);
if(strlen($File) < 12)
return;
// Scan first 12 bytes of file for known MIME headers.
$MatchedMime = '';
foreach($MimeTypeConsts as $Type => $Bytes)
{
$NumMatching = 0;
$NumBytes = count($Bytes);
for($i = 0; $i < $NumBytes; $i++)
{
if(ord($File[$i]) == $Bytes[$i])
$NumMatching++;
else
break;
}
if($NumMatching == $NumBytes)
{
$MatchedMime = $Type;
break;
}
}
// Check if the file does NOT have one of the known MIME types.
if(strlen($MatchedMime) <= 0)
return;
// If we fix up TIF_TT and TIF_MM, you can use $MatchedMime in lieu
// of the extension on the file name.
if($MatchedMime == 'tif_ii' || $MatchedMime == 'tif_mm')
$MatchedMime = 'tif';
// What's the max size allowed to upload?
$MaxSize = min(ReturnBytes(ini_get('post_max_size')), MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE);
// Get full file.
$File = file_get_contents('php://input', null, null, 0, $MaxSize + 8);
// Get file size.
$Size = strlen($File);
if($Size > $MaxSize)
return;
// Get hash of the file contents.
$Hash = hash('SHA1', $File, true);
file_put_contents(UPLOADS_DIR.'/'.bin2hex($Hash).'.'.$MatchedMime, $File);
The file will now be saved in UPLOADS_DIR using the hash as it's name and the MIME type as its extension. (Whatever extension was originally on the file name is ignored and not used.)
$SizeResult = getimagesize('php://input');But then, my problem is... in order to get the actual file, I'd have to run$File = file_get_contents('php://input');... essentially download the file twice (right?) That doesn't seem efficient :( – Lakey Mar 2 '12 at 4:10