With better words getlastmod() returning the last time the script in which it is being called was modified, it does not require or use a parameter.getlastmod
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
getlastmod — Gets time of last page modification
Description
Gets the time of the last modification of the main script of execution.
If you're interested in getting the last modification time of a different file, consider using filemtime().
Parameters
This function has no parameters.
Return Values
Returns the time of the last modification of the current
page. The value returned is a Unix timestamp, suitable for
feeding to date(). Returns false on error.
Examples
Example #1 getlastmod() example
<?php
// outputs e.g. 'Last modified: March 04 1998 20:43:59.'
echo "Last modified: " . date ("F d Y H:i:s.", getlastmod());
?>See Also
- date() - Format a Unix timestamp
- getmyuid() - Gets PHP script owner's UID
- getmygid() - Get PHP script owner's GID
- get_current_user() - Gets the name of the owner of the current PHP script
- getmyinode() - Gets the inode of the current script
- getmypid() - Gets PHP's process ID
- filemtime() - Gets file modification time
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User Contributed Notes 5 notes
luca dot delpivo at gmail dot com ¶
14 years ago
Moro ¶
13 years ago
Return latest mod time of all included files:
<?php
function get_page_mod_time() {
$incls = get_included_files();
$incls = array_filter($incls, "is_file");
$mod_times = array_map('filemtime', $incls);
$mod_time = max($mod_times);
return $mod_time;
}
?>
Ant P. ¶
16 years ago
If you use register_shutdown_function() on certain SAPIs, various filesystem-related things inside the shutdown function might do unexpected things, one of which being this function can return false.
On the other hand getlastmod() apparently caches the return value, so if you use it at least once in normal code it should work for the remainder of the request.
rwruck ¶
21 years ago
DO NOT use this function unless you are absolutely sure both your Apache and PHP have been compiled with the same value for -DFILE_OFFSET_BITS.
If not, this function will return the access time (or maybe even garbage) instead of the modification time due do Apache and PHP using different versions of the stat structure.
This is true regardless of Apache and PHP version.
To be on the safe side, always use the workaround already posted below:
filemtime($_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME'])