On the command line (*nix) you can use the following command to extract a phar file:
$ mkdir tmp && cd $_
$ phar extract -f ../file.phar
(PHP 5 >= 5.3.0, PHP 7, PHP 8, PECL phar >= 2.0.0)
Phar::extractTo — Extract the contents of a phar archive to a directory
$directory
, array|string|null $files
= null
, bool $overwrite
= false
): bool
Extract all files within a phar archive to disk. Extracted files and directories preserve
permissions as stored in the archive. The optional parameters allow optional control over
which files are extracted, and whether existing files on disk can be overwritten.
The second parameter files
can be either the name of a file or
directory to extract, or an array of names of files and directories to extract. By
default, this method will not overwrite existing files, the third parameter can be
set to true to enable overwriting of files.
This method is similar to ZipArchive::extractTo().
returns true
on success, but it is better to check for thrown exception,
and assume success if none is thrown.
Throws PharException if errors occur while flushing changes to disk.
Example #1 A Phar::extractTo() example
<?php
try {
$phar = new Phar('myphar.phar');
$phar->extractTo('/full/path'); // extract all files
$phar->extractTo('/another/path', 'file.txt'); // extract only file.txt
$phar->extractTo('/this/path',
array('file1.txt', 'file2.txt')); // extract 2 files only
$phar->extractTo('/third/path', null, true); // extract all files, and overwrite
} catch (Exception $e) {
// handle errors
}
?>
Note:
Windows NTFS file systems do not support some characters in filenames, namely
<|>*?":
. Filenames with a trailing dot are not supported either. Contrary to some extraction tools, this method does not replace these characters with an underscore, but instead fails to extract such files.
On the command line (*nix) you can use the following command to extract a phar file:
$ mkdir tmp && cd $_
$ phar extract -f ../file.phar