The COM class allows you to instantiate an OLE compatible COM object and call its methods and access its properties.
COM class constructor. The parameters have the following meanings:
Can be a ProgID, Class ID or Moniker that names the component to load.
A ProgID is typically the application or DLL name, followed by a period, followed by the object name. e.g: Word.Application.
A Class ID is the UUID that uniquely identifies a given class.
A Moniker is a special form of naming, similar in concept to a URL scheme, that identifies a resource and specifies how it should be loaded. As an example, you could load up Word and get an object representing a word document by specifying the full path to the word document as the module name, or you can use LDAP: as a moniker to use the ADSI interface to LDAP.
The name of the DCOM server on which the component should be loaded and run. If NULL, the object is run using the default for the application. The default is typically to run it on the local machine, although the administrator might have configured the application to launch on a different machine.
If you specify a non-NULL value for server, PHP will refuse to load the object unless the com.allow_dcom configuration option is set to TRUE.
If server_name is an array, it should contain the following elements (case sensitive!). Note that they are all optional (although you need to specify both Username and Password together); if you omit the Server setting, the default server will be used (as mentioned above), and the instantiation of the object will not be affected by the com.allow_dcom directive.
Table 1. DCOM server name
server_name key | type | description |
---|---|---|
Server | string | The name of the server. |
Username | string | The username to connect as. |
Password | string | The password for Username. |
Flags | integer | One or more of the following constants, logically OR'd together: CLSCTX_INPROC_SERVER, CLSCTX_INPROC_HANDLER, CLSCTX_LOCAL_SERVER, CLSCTX_REMOTE_SERVER, CLSCTX_SERVER and CLSCTX_ALL. The default value if not specified here is CLSCTX_SERVER if you also omit Server, or CLSCTX_REMOTE_SERVER if you do specify a server. You should consult the Microsoft documentation for CoCreateInstance for more information on the meaning of these constants; you will typically never have to use them. |
Specifies the codepage that is used to convert strings to unicode-strings and vice versa. The conversion is applied whenever a PHP string is passed as a parameter or returned from a method of this COM object. The code page is sticky in PHP 5, which means that it will propagate to objects and variants returned from the object.
Possible values are CP_ACP (use system default ANSI code page - the default if this parameter is omitted), CP_MACCP, CP_OEMCP, CP_SYMBOL, CP_THREAD_ACP (use codepage/locale set for the current executing thread), CP_UTF7 and CP_UTF8. You may also use the number for a given codepage; consult the Microsoft documentation for more details on codepages and their numeric values.
The returned object is an overloaded object, which means that PHP does not see any fixed methods as it does with regular classes; instead, any property or method accesses are passed through to COM.
Starting with PHP 5, PHP will automatically detect methods that accept parameters by reference, and will automatically convert regular PHP variables to a form that can be passed by reference. This means that you can call the method very naturally; you needn't go to any extra effort in your code.
In PHP 4, to pass parameters by reference you need to create an instance of the VARIANT class to wrap the byref parameters.
In PHP versions prior to 5, a number of not very pleasant hacks meant that the following method names were not passed through to COM and were handled directly by PHP. PHP 5 eliminates these things; read the details below to determine how to fix your scripts. These magic method names are case insensitive.
void COM::AddRef ( void )Artificially adds a reference count to the COM object.
Warning |
You should never need to use this method. It exists a logical complement to the Release() method below. |
Artificially removes a reference count from the COM object.
Warning |
You should never need to use this method. It's existence in PHP is a bug designed to work around a bug that keeps COM objects running longer than they should. |
These pseudo methods are only available if com_isenum() returns TRUE, in which case, they hide any methods with the same names that might otherwise be provided by the COM object. These methods have all been eliminated in PHP 5, and you should use the Section called For Each in Reference VIII, COM and .Net (Windows) instead.
object COM::All ( void )Returns a variant representing a SafeArray that has 10 elements; each element will be an empty/null variant. This function was supposed to return an array containing all the elements from the iterator, but was never completed. Do not use.
object COM::Next ( void )Returns a variant representing the next element available from the iterator, or FALSE when there are no more elements.
object COM::Prev ( void )Returns a variant representing the previous element available from the iterator, or FALSE when there are no more elements.
void COM::Reset ( void )Rewinds the iterator back to the start.
Example 2. COM example (2)
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