Unlike other comments suggest, there's no need to serialize a string to use preg_match's "u" modifier for testing if a string is valid UTF-8. You can just use
<?php
function is_utf8($str) {
return (bool) preg_match('//u', $str);
}
(PHP 4 >= 4.4.3, PHP 5 >= 5.1.3, PHP 7)
mb_check_encoding — Check if the string is valid for the specified encoding
$var
= NULL
[, string $encoding
= mb_internal_encoding()
]] )Checks if the specified byte stream is valid for the specified encoding. It is useful to prevent so-called "Invalid Encoding Attack".
var
The byte stream to check. If it is omitted, this function checks all the input from the beginning of the request.
encoding
The expected encoding.
Returns TRUE
on success or FALSE
on failure.
Unlike other comments suggest, there's no need to serialize a string to use preg_match's "u" modifier for testing if a string is valid UTF-8. You can just use
<?php
function is_utf8($str) {
return (bool) preg_match('//u', $str);
}
To get more information about how this function validates UTF-8, I ran some tests on PHP 5.5.10, PHP 5.4.24 and PHP 5.3.28. It seems that the function detects valid and invalid byte sequences correctly according to UTF-8 and the Unicode specifications, except for one issue:
in PHP 5.3.28, the function allows code points above U+10FFFF, which also allows five and six byte sequences. The later versions have corrected this issue.
Other than that, each version works correctly. Overlong encodings, surrogates, any lone bytes above 0x80 and too short byte sequences are all considered invalid. All valid code points in Unicode are considered valid when encoded with correct number of bytes (including Astral planes, i.e. four byte squences below U+10FFFF).
mb_detect_encoding() provided similar results with strict parameter enabled (except for PHP 5.3.28, in which it performed worse than mb_check_encoding())
Note that the algorithm in javalc6's comment checks UTF-8 compliance by the letter of the specs.
This means that overlong byte sequences will pass. For example: 0xC0 0xAF can be used to encode U+002F, the slash character. While legal, this character is more properly encoded as 0x2F. Overlong sequences are unnecessary and should be avoided; they have been - and still are - used in various attacks (like directory traversal attacks).
It also means that high Unicode characters outside the Basic Multilingual Plane will pass; this means characters above U+FFFF, composed of 4+ bytes (hieroglyhps, cuneiform, etc). You need to decide if you want those characters or not. If you do, be aware that they often cause compatibility problems (for example with JSON and some databases).
mb_check_encoding(), mb_detect_encoding(x, y, TRUE), and the other comments up to now all reject characters outside the BMP and overlong sequences.
In order to check if a string is encoded correctly in utf-8, I suggest the following function, that implements the RFC3629 better than mb_check_encoding():
<?php
function check_utf8($str) {
$len = strlen($str);
for($i = 0; $i < $len; $i++){
$c = ord($str[$i]);
if ($c > 128) {
if (($c > 247)) return false;
elseif ($c > 239) $bytes = 4;
elseif ($c > 223) $bytes = 3;
elseif ($c > 191) $bytes = 2;
else return false;
if (($i + $bytes) > $len) return false;
while ($bytes > 1) {
$i++;
$b = ord($str[$i]);
if ($b < 128 || $b > 191) return false;
$bytes--;
}
}
}
return true;
} // end of check_utf8
?>
This function does not check for bad byte sequence(s), it only checks if the byte stream is valid. If you want to verify a encoded string is valid, (IE: does not contain any bad byte sequences do the following...
<?php
/* check a strings encoded value */
function checkEncoding ( $string, $string_encoding )
{
$fs = $string_encoding == 'UTF-8' ? 'UTF-32' : $string_encoding;
$ts = $string_encoding == 'UTF-32' ? 'UTF-8' : $string_encoding;
return $string === mb_convert_encoding ( mb_convert_encoding ( $string, $fs, $ts ), $ts, $fs );
}
/* test 1 variables */
$string = "\x00\x81";
$encoding = "Shift_JIS";
/* test 1 mb_check_encoding (test for bad byte stream) */
if ( true === mb_check_encoding ( $string, $encoding ) )
{
echo 'valid (' . $encoding . ') encoded byte stream!<br />';
}
else
{
echo 'invalid (' . $encoding . ') encoded byte stream!<br />';
}
/* test 1 checkEncoding (test for bad byte sequence(s)) */
if ( true === checkEncoding ( $string, $encoding ) )
{
echo 'valid (' . $encoding . ') encoded byte sequence!<br />';
}
else
{
echo 'invalid (' . $encoding . ') encoded byte sequence!<br />';
}
/* test 2 */
/* test 2 variables */
$string = "\x00\xE3";
$encoding = "UTF-8";
/* test 2 mb_check_encoding (test for bad byte stream) */
if ( true === mb_check_encoding ( $string, $encoding ) )
{
echo 'valid (' . $encoding . ') encoded byte stream!<br />';
}
else
{
echo 'invalid (' . $encoding . ') encoded byte stream!<br />';
}
/* test 2 checkEncoding (test for bad byte sequence(s)) */
if ( true === checkEncoding ( $string, $encoding ) )
{
echo 'valid (' . $encoding . ') encoded byte sequence!<br />';
}
else
{
echo 'invalid (' . $encoding . ') encoded byte sequence!<br />';
}
?>
The best way to validate UTF-8 sequence.
This works for not only scalar, but also array and object recursively.
<?php
function is_valid_utf8($text) {
return (bool)preg_match('//u', serialize($text));
}
?>
For supporting non-scalar variables,
<?php
function validate_utf8($input) {
return (bool)preg_match('//u', serialize($input));
}