Gets the last access time of the given file.
Path to the file.
Returns the time the file was last accessed, or FALSE
on failure. The time is returned as a Unix timestamp.
Upon failure, an E_WARNING
is emitted.
The atime of a file is supposed to change whenever the data blocks of a file are being read. This can be costly performance-wise when an application regularly accesses a very large number of files or directories.
Some Unix filesystems can be mounted with atime updates disabled to increase the performance of such applications; USENET news spools are a common example. On such filesystems this function will be useless.
Note that time resolution may differ from one file system to another.
<?php // outputs e.g. somefile.txt was last accessed: December 29 2002 22:16:23. $filename = 'somefile.txt'; if (file_exists($filename)) { echo "$filename was last accessed: " . date("F d Y H:i:s.", fileatime($filename)); } ?>
date() -
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