14

Simple question: Is the scope of require_once global?

For example:

<?PHP require_once('baz.php'); // do some stuff foo ($bar); function foo($bar) { require_once('baz.php'); // do different stuff } ?> 

When foo is called, does it re-parse baz.php? Or does it rely on the already required file from the main php file (analagous to calling require_once twice consecutively for the same include file)?

I saw this thread before, but it didn't quite answer the question:

Should require_once "some file.php" ; appear anywhere but the top of the file?

Thanks for your help!

4 Answers 4

7

require_once() basically relies on the physical file to determine whether or not it's been included. So it's not so much the context that you're calling require_once() in, it's whether or not that physical file has previously been required.

In your code above, your foo() function would not re-parse baz.php, since it is going to be the same file as was previously included at the top.

However, you will get different results based on whether you included it inside foo(), or included it at the top, as the scoping will apply when require_once() does succeed.

Sign up to request clarification or add additional context in comments.

Comments

5

It does not. require_once's tracking applies to inside functions. However, the following scripts produce an error:

a.php

<?php require_once('b.php'); function f() { require_once('b.php'); echo "inside function f;"; } ?> 

b.php

<?php f(); ?> 

because function f() is not pre-defined to b.php.

Comments

3

To more specifically answer your question, the second time you call require_once on that file, it won't do anything, because it's already be included.

If your include has functions etc. in it, then you would have issues including it inside a function anyway, so scope is irrelevant. If it's just variables being defined or processed, then you can just use require instead of require_once if you want it to be included again, thereby redefining the variables in your scope.

Comments

0

At least in PHP 7.3, require_once has global scope.
If it would not, both x.php and z.php should throw errors as y.php does:

a.php

<?php function a() { require_once 'b.php'; b(); } 

b.php

<?php function b() { debug_print_backtrace(); } 

x.php

<?php require_once 'a.php'; a(); b(); 

-->

#0 c() called at [/var/www/b.php:2] #1 b() called at [/var/www/a.php:3] #0 c() called at [/var/www/a.php:4] 

y.php

<?php require_once 'a.php'; b(); 

--> Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function b() in /var/www/y.php on line 3

z.php

<?php require_once 'a.php'; require_once 'b.php'; b(); 

-->

#0 b() called at [/var/www/z.php:4] 

Comments

Start asking to get answers

Find the answer to your question by asking.

Ask question

Explore related questions

See similar questions with these tags.