As of PHP 7.0, with a little creativity and knowledge of some lesser known PHP features, you can absolutely do this without resorting to eval or creating script files dynamically. You just need to use anonymous classes and class_alias(), like such:
spl_autoload_register(function ($unfoundClassName) {
{
$newClass = new class{}; //create an anonymous class
$newClassName = get_class($newClass); //get the name PHP assigns the anonymous class
class_alias($newClassName, $unfoundClassName); //alias the anonymous class with your class name
}
This works because anonymous classes are still assigned a name behind the scenes and put in the global scope, so you're free to grab that class name and alias it. Check out the second comment under the anonymous classes link above for more information.
Having said that, I feel like all the people in this question who are saying "Eval is always a very bad idea. Just don't use it ever!" are just repeating what they've heard from the hive mind and not thinking for themselves. Eval is in the language for a reason, and there are situations where it can be used effectively. If you're on an older version of PHP, eval might be a good solution here.
However, they are correct in that it can open up very large security holes and you have to be careful how you use it and understand how to eliminate the risks. The important thing is, much like SQL injection, you have to sanitize any input you put in the eval statement.
For example, if your autoloader looked like this:
spl_autoload_register(function ($unfoundClassName) {
{
eval("class $unfoundClassName {}");
}
A hacker could do something like this:
$injectionCode = "bogusClass1{} /*insert malicious code to run on the server here */ bogusClass2";
new $injectionCode();
See how this has the potential to be a security hole? Anything the hacker puts between the two bogusClass names will be run on your server by the eval statement.
If you adjust your autoloader to check the class name passed in (i.e. doing a preg_match to make sure there's no spaces or special characters, checking it against a list of acceptable names, etc.), you can eliminate these risks and then eval might be totally fine to use in this situation. If you're on PHP 7 or higher though, I recommend the anonymous class alias method above.