To suppress the PHP warning, just prepend the function with the error suppression character @. I'm usually against error suppression, but apparently some genius thought it was a good idea to really drive the point home that you have a bad login. Returning false wasn't enough?
if( ! @ftp_login( $connection, 'USERNAME', 'PASSWORD' ) ){
die( 'Bad login, but no PHP warning thrown.');
}ftp_login
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
ftp_login — Logs in to an FTP connection
Description
function ftp_login(FTP\Connection
$ftp, string $username, #[\SensitiveParameter]string $password): boolLogs in to the given FTP connection.
Parameters
ftp- An FTP\Connection instance.
username-
The username (
USER). password-
The password (
PASS).
Return Values
Returns true on success or false on failure.
If login fails, PHP will also throw a warning.
Changelog
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 8.1.0 |
The ftp parameter expects an FTP\Connection
instance now; previously, a resource was expected.
|
Examples
Example #1 ftp_login() example
<?php
$ftp_server = "ftp.example.com";
$ftp_user = "foo";
$ftp_pass = "bar";
// set up a connection or die
$ftp = ftp_connect($ftp_server) or die("Couldn't connect to $ftp_server");
// try to login
if (@ftp_login($ftp, $ftp_user, $ftp_pass)) {
echo "Connected as $ftp_user@$ftp_server\n";
} else {
echo "Couldn't connect as $ftp_user\n";
}
// close the connection
ftp_close($ftp);
?>
+add a note
User Contributed Notes 2 notes
Travis Weston ¶
11 years ago
mattsch at gmail dot com ¶
15 years ago
Note that to make an anonymous ftp connection, you need to specify "anonymous" as the username and "" (empty string) as the password.
Example:
<?php
ftp_login('ftp.example.com', 'anonymous', '');
?>