Xin lỗi vì đã trả lời muộn cho một câu hỏi đã được trả lời, nhưng tôi không nghĩ rằng base64_decode ($ x, true) là một giải pháp đủ tốt cho vấn đề này. Trên thực tế, có thể không có một giải pháp tốt nào phù hợp với bất kỳ đầu vào nhất định nào. Ví dụ: tôi có thể đặt nhiều giá trị xấu vào $ x và không nhận được giá trị trả về sai.
Tôi nghĩ rằng ngoài việc kiểm tra giá trị trả lại nghiêm ngặt, bạn cũng cần thực hiện xác thực sau giải mã. Cách đáng
tin cậy nhất là nếu bạn có thể giải mã và sau đó kiểm tra một tập hợp các giá trị khả thi đã biết.
Một giải pháp chung hơn với độ chính xác dưới 100% (gần hơn với chuỗi dài hơn, không chính xác đối với chuỗi ngắn) là nếu bạn kiểm tra đầu ra của mình để xem liệu nhiều ký tự có nằm ngoài phạm vi thông thường của ký tự utf-8 (hoặc bất kỳ mã hóa nào bạn sử dụng) hay không.
Bạn
có thể nên sử dụng giá trị trung bình () của các giá trị được giải mã thay vì giá trị max (), tôi chỉ sử dụng hàm max () trong ví dụ này vì đáng buồn là không có hàm ý nghĩa () tích hợp sẵn trong PHP. Thước đo bạn sử dụng (trung bình, tối đa, v.v.) so với ngưỡng nào (ví dụ: 200) phụ thuộc vào hồ sơ sử dụng ước tính của bạn.
Tóm lại, động thái chiến thắng duy nhất là không chơi. Tôi sẽ cố gắng tránh phải phân biệt base64 ngay từ đầu.
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
base64_decode — Decodes data encoded with MIME base64
Description
base64_decode(string $string
, bool $strict
= false
): string|false
Parameters
string
The encoded data.
strict
If the strict
parameter is set to true
then the base64_decode() function will return false
if the input contains character from outside the base64 alphabet. Otherwise invalid characters will be silently discarded.
Return Values
Returns the decoded data or false
on failure. The returned data may be binary.
Examples
Example #1
base64_decode() example
<?php
$str = 'VGhpcyBpcyBhbiBlbmNvZGVkIHN0cmluZw==';
echo base64_decode($str);
?>
The above example will output:
This is an encoded string
winkelnkemper at googlemail dot com ¶
11 years ago
If you want to save data that is derived from a Javascript canvas.toDataURL() function, you have to convert blanks into plusses. If you do not do that, the decoded data is corrupted:
<?php
$encodedData = str_replace(' ','+',$encodedData);
$decocedData = base64_decode($encodedData);
?>
walf ¶
6 years ago
Base64 for URL parameters/filenames, that adhere to RFC 4648.
Defaults to dropping the padding on encode since it's not required for decoding, and keeps the URL free of % encodings.
<?php
function base64url_encode($data, $pad = null) {
$data = str_replace(array('+', '/'), array('-', '_'), base64_encode($data));
if (!$pad) {
$data = rtrim($data, '=');
}
return $data;
}
function base64url_decode($data) {
return base64_decode(str_replace(array('-', '_'), array('+', '/'), $data));
}
martinstaemmler at gmx dot net ¶
13 years ago
I had some trouble trying to let base64_decode decode base64-strings longer than ~5k chars.
The base64-decoding function is a homomorphism between modulo 4 and modulo 3-length segmented strings. That motivates a divide and conquer approach: Split the encoded string into substrings counting modulo 4 chars, then decode each substring and concatenate all of them.
Then instead of
<?php $decoded = base64_decode($encoded); ?>
for big $encoded strings, it's saver to use
<?php
$decoded = "";
for ($i=0; $i < ceil(strlen($encoded)/256); $i++)
$decoded = $decoded . base64_decode(substr($encoded,$i*256,256));
?>
where 256 can be replaced by a sufficiently small modulo 4 natural.
Tom ¶
15 years ago
This function supports "base64url" as described in Section 5 of RFC 4648, "Base 64 Encoding with URL and Filename Safe Alphabet"
<?php
function base64url_decode($base64url)
{
$base64 = strtr($base64url, '-_', '+/');
$plainText = base64_decode($base64);
return ($plainText);
}
?>
Starson ¶
15 years ago
To expand on Jes' post:
The change took place between 5.0.5 and 5.1.0. Exactly where I don't know or care.
In short php <= 5.0.5's base64_decode( $string ) will assume that a space is meant to be a + sign where php >= 5.1.0's base64_decode( $string ) will no longer make that assumption. I did not see this noted in the change log.
Please note that, as of this writing, mb_convert_encoding( $string, "UTF-8", "BASE64" ) still behaves as base64_decode( $string ) did in php <= 5.0.5 regardless of the version of php you are running.
debug ¶
14 years ago
@morgangalpin att gmail dotty com
A better implementation would be the following regular expression:
^[a-zA-Z0-9/+]*={0,2}$
Which will also detect the usage of = or == at the end of the string (and only end).
If this regex isn't following proper RFC guidelines, please comment on it.
A function geared specifically toward this:
<?phpfunction is_base64_encoded()
{
if (preg_match('%^[a-zA-Z0-9/+]*={0,2}$%', $data)) {
return TRUE;
} else {
return FALSE;
}
};is_base64_encoded("iash21iawhdj98UH3"); // true
is_base64_encoded("#iu3498r"); // false
is_base64_encoded("asiudfh9w=8uihf"); // false
is_base64_encoded("a398UIhnj43f/1!+sadfh3w84hduihhjw=="); // true?>
twm at twmacinta dot
com ¶
14 years ago
To follow up on Starson's post, PHP was changed to no longer treat a space as if it were a plus sign in CVS revision 1.43.2.1, which corresponds to PHP 5.1.0. You can see what happened with a diff to branch point 1.43 at:
http://cvs.php.net/viewvc.cgi/php-src/ext/standard/base64.c
The CVS log indicates that this change was made to fix bug #34214 (base64_decode() does not properly ignore whitespace).
It would seem from the comment preceding the code which was removed that the treatment of the space as if it were the plus sign was actually intentional at one time:
When Base64 gets POSTed, all pluses are interpreted as spaces.
This line changes them back. It's not exactly the Base64 spec,
but it is completely compatible with it (the spec says that spaces
are invalid). This will also save many people considerable
headache.
if (ch == ' ') ch = '+';
However, RFC 3548 states that characters not in the Base64 alphabet should either be ignored or cause the implementation to reject the encoding and RFC 2045 says they should be ignored. So the original code was unfortunately not fully compatible with the spec or other implementations. It may have also masked problems with code not properly escaping POST variables.
tobias at silverxnet dot de ¶
18 years ago
I was wondering how to decode attached images within mails. Basically they are mostly JPEG files, so it was obviously to write a function that decodes JPEG images.
I guess the plainest way to do so was the following:
<?php
function base64_to_jpeg( $inputfile, $outputfile ) {
/* read data (binary) */
$ifp = fopen( $inputfile, "rb" );
$imageData = fread( $ifp, filesize( $inputfile ) );
fclose( $ifp );
/* encode & write data (binary) */
$ifp = fopen( $outputfile, "wb" );
fwrite( $ifp, base64_decode( $imageData ) );
fclose( $ifp );
/* return output filename */
return( $outputfile );
}
?>
This function decodes the given inputfile (a filename!) and saves it to the given outputfile (a filename as well) and then returns the output filename for further usage (e.g. redirect, imagejpeg() and so on).
I thought that might be helpful.
user at sfdsfd dot com ¶
3 years ago
function is_base64($str){
if($str === base64_encode(base64_decode($str))){
return true;
}
return false;
}
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
$str = 'VGhpcyBpcyBiYXNlNjQgZW5jb2RlIHN0cmluZw==';
if(is_base64($str)){
print base64_decode($str);
}
nicolem2005 at gmail dot com ¶
11 years ago
base64_decode seems to fail when decoding big files/strings. I had an issue decoding a 7MB image file. Here is a solution that worked for me:
$decodedstring=base64_decode(chunk_split($encodedstring));
mcalwell ¶
13 years ago
I had a problem testing whether an imap message body was base64 encoded on a pre 5.2.* server. I had been using this function on a post 5.2 server.
I found that the function imap_base64() returns FALSE on failing to decode a string, and that I could use that to check instead.
<?php
if(imap_base64($body)) $body = imap_base64($body);
?>
nsayer at kfu dot com ¶
20 years ago
I used to do uudecode as a C module, but I've discovered a really fast way to do it in PHP. Here it is:
<?php
function uudecode($encode) {
$b64chars="ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ\
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/";
$encode = preg_replace("/^./m","",$encode);
$encode = preg_replace("/\n/m","",$encode);
for($i=0; $i<strlen($encode); $i++) {
if ($encode[$i] == '`')
$encode[$i] = ' ';
$encode[$i] = $b64chars[ord($encode[$i])-32];
}
while(
strlen($encode) % 4)
$encode .= "=";
return
base64_decode($encode);
}
?>
This is the PHP equivalent to perl's unpack("u",___). That is, you need to strip the 'begin' and 'end' lines from the typical uuencoded file.
Klaus Fehrenbacher ¶
19 years ago
this script can correct the bug
<?php
$enc = chunk_split(preg_replace('!\015\012|\015|\012!','',$enc));
$enc = base64_decode($enc);
?>
dimagolov at yahoo dot
com ¶
13 years ago
Here is function to decode Base 62 (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base_62) string to number. It is used by MTA in message id, e.g. by Exim
<?php
function base62_decode($str) {
$ret= 0;
for ($i= 0, $l= strlen($str); $i < $l; $i++) {
$val= ord($str[$i]);
if (ctype_digit($str[$i]))
$val-= ord('0');
else if (ctype_upper($str[$i]))
$val-= ord('A') - 10;
else if (ctype_lower($str[$i]))
$val-= ord('a') - 36;
else
$val= 0;
$ret= $ret * 62 + $val;
}
return $ret;
}
?>
zmorris at zsculpt dot com ¶
14 years ago
Here is a drop-in replacement for base64_decode(), based on a faster version of morgangalpin's code:
<?php
// workaround for bug in php 4.3.11 through 4.4.7, 5.1.2 through 5.2.4 and perhaps others (http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=37244)
function base64_decode_fix( $data, $strict = false )
{
if( $strict )
if( preg_match( '![^a-zA-Z0-9/+=]!', $data ) )
return( false );
return(
base64_decode( $data ) );
}
?>
alvaro at demogracia dot com ¶
13 years ago
You can do partial decoding (e.g. from buffered input streams) if you choose a chunk length that is multiple of 4:
<?php
$encoded
= base64_encode('The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog');
for($i=0, $len=strlen($encoded); $i<$len; $i+=4){
echo base64_decode( substr($encoded, $i, 4) );
}?>
4 encoded chars represent 3 original chars. The "=" character is used as padding.
markandrewslade at gmail dot com ¶
6 years ago
The docs don't make this explicitly clear, but if you omit `$strict` or set it to `false` then invalid characters in the encoded input will be silently ignored.
<?phpecho base64_decode('VGhpcyBpcyBhbiBlbmNvZGVkIHN0cmluZw=='); // "This is an encoded string"
echo base64_decode('$VGhpcyBpcyBhbiBlbmNvZGVkIHN0cmluZw=='); // "This is an encoded string"
echo base64_decode('$VGhpcyBpcyBhbiBlbmNvZGVkIHN0cmluZw==', true); // false?>