How to get the content-type of a file in PHP?

I am using this function, which includes several fallbacks to compensate for older versions of PHP or simply bad results:

function getFileMimeType($file) {
    if (function_exists('finfo_file')) {
        $finfo = finfo_open(FILEINFO_MIME_TYPE);
        $type = finfo_file($finfo, $file);
        finfo_close($finfo);
    } else {
        require_once 'upgradephp/ext/mime.php';
        $type = mime_content_type($file);
    }

    if (!$type || in_array($type, array('application/octet-stream', 'text/plain'))) {
        $secondOpinion = exec('file -b --mime-type ' . escapeshellarg($file), $foo, $returnCode);
        if ($returnCode === 0 && $secondOpinion) {
            $type = $secondOpinion;
        }
    }

    if (!$type || in_array($type, array('application/octet-stream', 'text/plain'))) {
        require_once 'upgradephp/ext/mime.php';
        $exifImageType = exif_imagetype($file);
        if ($exifImageType !== false) {
            $type = image_type_to_mime_type($exifImageType);
        }
    }

    return $type;
}

It tries to use the newer PHP finfo functions. If those aren’t available, it uses the mime_content_type alternative and includes the drop-in replacement from the Upgrade.php library to make sure this exists. If those didn’t return anything useful, it’ll try the OS’ file command. AFAIK that’s only available on *NIX systems, you may want to change that or get rid of it if you plan to use this on Windows. If nothing worked, it tries exif_imagetype as fallback for images only.

I have come to notice that different servers vary widely in their support for the mime type functions, and that the Upgrade.php mime_content_type replacement is far from perfect. The limited exif_imagetype functions, both the original and the Upgrade.php replacement, are working pretty reliably though. If you’re only concerned about images, you may only want to use this last one.

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