If I am
writing my own code correctly, $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] should return the
full path of the script and filename from the document root of the
website. If your host has your subdomain set up right, you should be
able to issue: "echo $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'].$_SERVER['PHP_SELF']" in
a php script and have it return the complete path of the file via the
filesystem... take out the "DOCUMENT_ROOT" and you should be left with
the path the webserver uses to the script. The above example is what
I use to include files not in the same directory, minus the php_self
obviously.
However, in cases where I submit a form back onto itself I use
$_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] all the time. Hence my questioning if you know
what the server is using for DOCUMENT_ROOT. If it thinks the document
root is "/var/www/domain.com/"
and the PHP_SELF refers to "/sub/form.php", then php_self will not
return what you expect, nor want it to.
I would suggest taking a look at:
http://us3.php.net/reserved.variables for more help.
Hope that helps,
Tony
Kurt Granroth wrote:
Actually, I should have specified that the PHP scripts are
all 3rd party ones. If they are scripts that I wrote, then there are
always ways around it. But the 3rd party ones invariably do 'dirname'
on PHP_SELF (or something very similar). That's why I want to know a
way around that at a higher-level. Maybe some php.ini setting or
somesuch.
On Jan 15, 2006, at 5:07 PM, alex@crackpot.org wrote:
Try a test script like this :
'var_dump($_SERVER);'. This will show you all the
variables provided by the web server (like DOCUMENT_ROOT, PHP_SELF,
etc.) There
may be one which has what you want. Maybe PATH_TRANSLATED?
alex
Quoting Kurt Granroth <plug-discuss@granroth.org>:
This isn't directly Linux related but since
I know there are a lot of
PHP folks on this list, I thought I'd ask here.
I have multiple domain and multiple subdomain support with my web
hosting enabled mostly by using mod_rewrite. The end result is that
I can define my domains and subdomains by just creating the proper
directory structure.
For instance, say I have "sub.domain.com", "other.domain.com", and
"cool.com". I would simply create following directory structure:
$DOCUMENT_ROOT/domain.com/sub/
$DOCUMENT_ROOT/domain.com/other/
$DOCUMENT_ROOT/cool.com/
So far, so good. That all works just as expected. Now say, though,
that I have a PHP file 'index.php' in the directory 'domain.com/sub'
that looks like so:
<?php echo $_SERVER["PHP_SELF"] ?>
I then execute the script using "http://sub.domain.com/index.php".
The result:
/domain.com/sub/index.php
This is technically accurate... but not at all what I want. Why?
Because typically, PHP code uses the dirname() of this to find other
relative scripts. If you do that, though, then the constructed URL
will look like so:
http://sub.domain.com/domain.com/sub/someother.php
instead of
http://sub.domain.com/someother.php
So it seems that I somehow have to "fool" PHP into thinking that
PHP_SELF (and SCRIPT_NAME and SCRIPT_FILENAME) is "/index.php"
instead of "/domain.com/sub/index.php"
Is that even possible? If so, how. If not, is there any way around
this at all?
Thanks!
Kurt
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