Edit report at http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=50921&edit=1

 ID:                 50921
 Comment by:         dean at deansas dot org
 Reported by:        phpbug at starurl dot com
 Summary:            '200 OK' HTTP status despite PHP error
 Status:             Bogus
 Type:               Bug
 Package:            HTTP related
 Operating System:   *
 PHP Version:        5.2.12
 Block user comment: N
 Private report:     N

 New Comment:

> The reason why display errors needs to be turned of, is because

> displayed errors generate output, and output causes the headers 

> to be send out. I'm afraid we can't do much about this.



Can't PHPs error handling first set a 500 header and then output

error messages as appropriate? 



It doesn't seem to me like this is something that can never ever be
fixed


Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2010-08-12 15:40:32] tyra3l at gmail dot com

It's seems that this is a known bug in the xdebug, see:

http://bugs.xdebug.org/view.php?id=587



but couldn't fix it without making some changes in php itself:



"Before I can address this, there need to be some changes in PHP itself.
It 

doesn't expose some required information to extensions yet that I will
need."



I hope this get fixed soon.



Tyrael

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2010-08-12 15:35:41] tyra3l at gmail dot com

I can reproduce the problem.

I found out, that if I enable xdebug, then I get header 200, if I
disable it, then 

it's 500.

Will report it to Derick.



Tyrael

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2010-03-12 08:37:24] anzenews at volja dot net

I am also having huge problems with this - haproxy health checks do not
work reliably because of this bug. Please consider reopening it - it is
not bogus.



PHP doesn't return HTTP error code, even if display_errors is set to 0.
One example:

<?

  ini_set('display_errors',0);

  this_function_does_not_exist();

  echo "ok";

?>



This returns an empty page with status code 200:

-----

HTTP/1.1 200 OK

Date    Fri, 12 Mar 2010 07:27:15 GMT

Server  Apache/2.2.9 (Debian) PHP/5.2.6-1+lenny6 with Suhosin-Patch

X-Powered-By    PHP/5.2.6-1+lenny6

Vary    Accept-Encoding

Content-Encoding        gzip

Content-Length  20

Keep-Alive      timeout=15, max=100

Connection      Keep-Alive

Content-Type    text/html

-----



Content-Length is 20, probably because of gzip? There are no spaces
around PHP block in source code.



I have checked phpinfo() and display_errors is set to Off, so there is
no error there. Also, I have tried setting it in php.ini - no change.



Another problem: parse errors are also not handled correctly (even if
display_errors is set to 0 in php.ini). See previous poster's example. 



Thanks!

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2010-02-03 19:03:56] der...@php.net

The reason why display errors needs to be turned of, is because
displayed errors generate output, and output causes the headers to be
send out. I'm afraid we can't do much about this.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
[2010-02-03 18:01:37] phpbug at starurl dot com

Thank you for the swift response Jani.



I can confirm that the 500 status code works for the following (runtime
error):



    <?

    ini_set('display_errors', 0); 

    $x = y();

    ?>



But fails for parse errors (because the "disply_errors" line doesn't get
executed):



    <?

    ini_set('display_errors', 0); 

    x = y;

    ?>



Firstly, is this dependency really necessary? Just because we have
'display_errors' enabled doesn't mean we want fatal errors to go
unlogged and unnoticed because a "200 OK" status is incorrectly
returned.



Secondly, the majority of PHP developers out there use shared hosting,
on which 'display_errors' is normally true and is impossible to change
globally - are we saying they're stuck with incorrect HTTP status codes
when parse errors occur?



The restriction that headers must not already have been sent is of
course understandable as it is unavoidable. Not overriding an explicitly
set HTTP status code also makes sense.



But why not set the status code as "500 Internal Server Error" when any
fatal parse/runtime error occurs, regardless of the value of
'display_errors'? This would be consistent with the HTTP spec, which
recommends a 5XX response if an error occurs, and is followed by just
about every other web server language out there (e.g., ASP, .NET).



Many thanks,  BJ

------------------------------------------------------------------------


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