{fetch}
{fetch}
is used to retrieve files from the local file system, http, or
ftp and display the contents.
Attributes
Attribute | Required | Description |
---|---|---|
file | Yes | The file, http or ftp site to fetch |
assign | No | The template variable the output will be assigned to |
-
If the file name begins with
http://
, the website page will be fetched and displayed.Note
This will not support http redirects, be sure to include a trailing slash on your web page fetches where necessary.
-
If the file name begins with
ftp://
, the file will be downloaded from the ftp server and displayed. -
For local files, either a full system file path must be given, or a path relative to the executed php script.
Note
If security is enabled, and you are fetching a file from the local file system,
{fetch}
will only allow files from within the$secure_dir
path of the security policy. See the Security section for details. -
If the
assign
attribute is set, the output of the{fetch}
function will be assigned to this template variable instead of being output to the template.
Examples
{* include some javascript in your template *}
{fetch file='/export/httpd/www.example.com/docs/navbar.js'}
{* embed some weather text in your template from another web site *}
{fetch file='http://www.myweather.com/68502/'}
{* fetch a news headline file via ftp *}
{fetch file='ftp://user:password@ftp.example.com/path/to/currentheadlines.txt'}
{* as above but with variables *}
{fetch file="ftp://`$user`:`$password`@`$server`/`$path`"}
{* assign the fetched contents to a template variable *}
{fetch file='http://www.myweather.com/68502/' assign='weather'}
{if $weather ne ''}
<div id="weather">{$weather}</div>
{/if}