last day (16 days later) » 

11:48
-5
A: Is it possible to mend a serialize string that has become corrupted due to truncation?

fabrikI think this is almost impossible. Before you can repair your array you need to know how it is damaged. How many childs missing? What was the content? Sorry imho you can't do it. Proof: <?php $serialized = serialize( [ 'one' => 1, 'two' => 'nice', 'three' => 'w...

do you have a better answer?
why do you want to do anything at all?
or just hunting for badges, right? :)
Ultimately, it is not your answer that is wrong, it is the question that is Unclear / Cannot be reproduced. I got sucked in by all of the other answers that dropped in byte count adjusting snippets and didn't read the question well enough. This page should be closed and I should find a better home for my answer. My apologies for poking your old post.
I don't necessarily agree. the scenario op described is a real one. given some serialized data which has been damaged, and op wanted to know if there's any way to fix it using regular expressions. I still think there's no way to do that, (at least not with regular expressions) because it'd be a guesswork
Yeah. Okay, again, I think you are right. I think your answer is the only correct answer on the page. I'll be removing mine when I get a chance. Your downvote tally is misleading. Perhaps you could rephrase your wording so that it doesn't look like you are asking questions.
that's a good idea, I'll do it when I'll be at my desk. thanks
hey @mickmackusa, just added some more details to my answer.
11:48
Your demo does not show truncation. Your demo shows mid-string value modification that can be fixed by one of the simple preg calls posted below. Looks like I can't get lubosdz's answer to work out-of-the-box on a simple example. 3v4l.org/8AObr
then you have even less chance to restore
@mickmackusa sorry, but what are you doing with this question? editing title/description of an already answered (and don't get me wrong, I don't care about meaningless internet points) question is plain wrong, you're faking the context. why do you feel you need to do this?
I have added clarity to the question because there are so many answers that do not understand the malformation of the incoming serialized string. You see, the answers that are correcting the byte count will NEVER work. Furthermore, people use old pages to close new pages. It is important to clarify what this page is supposed to solve so that new closures are not misappropriated.
@mickmackusa no, you are vandalizing content, and after all adding the very same answer I've added before. what's your point?
There is absolutely no vandalism here. Since I had to explain how your mock data was inappropriate, I am starting to think that you don't understand the issue. I have made the question more clear and provided a new title that will not mislead volunteers and researchers. I'll actually delete my answer and only undelete it after I have developed a repairing function.
My point is to make this page clear for researchers that are trying to salvage their own truncated serialized string and clear for volunteers that want to try to answer. This page is horribly bloated with answers that will not possibly help researchers with corruption via truncation.
@mickmackusa how my example is inappropriate? what's the difference in a missing string chain/truncated serialized data? nothing, since both will return false in the end. also, what kind of researchers are you talking about? will you cast a delete vote on all answers except yours? where is your example? how is your answer is different than mine or others? chill, man
11:50
I am very chill. I feel like my attempts to improve this page/site are being challenged. I am merely defending my actions and explaining why I have done what I have done.
I would like to remove my delete vote from you answer but the system does not allow this - it will fade away I assume. My demo link using lubosdz's snippet from a few comments up shows what a truncated serialized string would look like (it is suddenly ended without closing one or more started declarations). I am moving this discussion to chat but I will not be available to speak indepth at the moment.
The difference between the two types of corruptions is the type of solution that is required.
If a value has been replaced mid-string and only the byte count is faulty then a single pre_replace_callback woll do.
In the case of truncation, a far more elaborate process is required.
I don't mean for this to get ugly. I volunteer because I love this place.
look, I'm honestly open to constructive criticism, but I'm not really understand your motivation behind "improving an already answered" question. you even changed the title, which gives an entirely different viewpoint on the scenario
The new title better describes the original question posted by the OP.
OP wanted to fix a serialized string with regular expressions which is impossible, regardless of what part of the serialized string is damaged
I haven't changed any context.
yes, but it alters the entire discussion
11:54
I now disagree. Not impossible, but definitely a rabbit hole.
That is my point "the discussion" (most of the answers) are wrong for this page.
of course they're wrong since you altered the title
They were always wrong. It's just that no one understood the question requirements.
most of the answers are trying to solve the problem from OPs standpoint
Are you actively trying not to understand me?
which was a faulty approach, this is why I've cut it down and gave the answer what I gave
11:56
I don't know if I am wasting my time explaining to you.
no need to explain anything
you've changed the context of a question with 12 answers
So you understand that your example does not reflect the OPs issue.
why would I bother with regex when it's unsalvageable?
The remaining data, despite being cut off on the right side, might be the cure for cancer. In this case, being able to recover the leftside data would be valuable to someone.
but this is not a scientific site
11:59
This is a salvage mission. What is lost is lost. The OP wants to make what is left into a valid serialized string
a lame developer fckd up a mysql schema
that's it
sorry, but you're scary
what kind of "salvage mission"
Or it is a second hand site. Whatever happened, the OP wants to unserialize what is left.
I don't mean to be scary.
create a wiki page if you have sense of mission
write a post on medium
anything
When I have time, I plan to write a function and undelete my post.
this is almost a 9 year old question, why bother?
12:02
Because the age of a question is irrelevant to someone with this same issue.
I have enough php skills to give this a good crack. I just have the time at the moment due to work and family.
Going to spend time with my wife now. I am happy to continue the conversation tomorrow.
feel free to create a wiki page and link in the thread

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