[nycphp-talk] Re: PHP_SELF problems
edward potter
edwardpotter at gmail.com
Fri Dec 29 15:20:11 EST 2006
i think there's some automatic online regex expression things that
figure it out for you or, u may want to post to one of the perl
groups, they LOVE this kinda of stuff. My brain is pretty much the
size of a pea this days, functioning at 1%! :-)
This looks like a cool application to figure the regex stuff out.
http://www.regexbuddy.com/
:-) ed
On 12/29/06, Dan Cech <dcech at phpwerx.net> wrote:
> edward potter wrote:
> > I have not really followed this discussion, but when i see something
> > like this:
> > "$_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME'] will contain the full _filesystem_ path,
> > which is not what we're after."
> >
> > Can you just do a 1 line regex and pull out what you need? And you are
> > all set.
> >
> > :-) ed
>
> Sure thing ed, care to take a stab at it? Don't forget that the
> filesystem path may actually bear no relation at all to the web path
> (aliases and symlinks are enormous fun!) ;)
>
> Dan
>
> > On 12/29/06, Dan Cech <dcech at phpwerx.net> wrote:
> >> Michael Sims wrote:
> >> > On Tuesday 26 December 2006 5:11 pm, Joseph Crawford wrote:
> >> >> Chris,
> >> >>
> >> >> do you suggest hardcoding the filenames even when referencing the same
> >> >> file that is executing?
> >> >
> >> > There was a long thread about this in July 2005.
> >> >
> >> > Executive summary: PHP_SELF intentionally includes extra URL garbage
> >> (or
> >> > valuable URL variables, take your pick) tacked on by the user.
> >> Don't use
> >> > it without knowing what it does.
> >> >
> >> > Here's what you get when you hit the URL:
> >> >
> >> > http://example.com/info.php/testing1?testing2 :
> >> >
> >> > _SERVER["REQUEST_URI"] /info.php/testing1?testing2
> >> > _SERVER["PHP_SELF"] /info.php/testing1
> >> > _SERVER["SCRIPT_NAME"] /info.php
> >> >
> >> > Get it? If you don't want that extra stuff tacked on by the user,
> >> use the
> >> > correct _SERVER variable. If you use REQUEST_URI or PHP_SELF, be
> >> aware the
> >> > user can affect the contents of that variable. 99% of the time, you
> >> want
> >> > SCRIPT_NAME, not PHP_SELF.
> >>
> >> Actually, I have recently come across a 'fly in the ointment' for this
> >> approach. If you're running php as a cgi, $_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME'] will
> >> contain the full _filesystem_ path, which is not what we're after.
> >>
> >> I'm not 100% sure what the solution to this problem is. Right now the
> >> only thing I can think of is to try and figure out the common part of
> >> PHP_SELF and SCRIPT_NAME, so as to drop both the extra filesystem info
> >> and any url garbage, but that seems pretty fragile to me.
> >>
> >> If anyone has a good solution or even any suggestions I'd love to hear
> >> them.
> >>
> >> Dan
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