On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 08:52 +0100, Sándor Tamás (HostWare Kft.) wrote:
> It depends. If the project built up of slightly different modules, putting
> the coders on a big, white table seems to be a good idea. But if the modules
> are completely different, you should separate them, so each of them
2008. 01. 21, hétfő keltezéssel 20.23-kor shiplu ezt írta:
> I configured autofs in my fedora so that when I plug any usb stick in
> /dev/sda1 it automatically mounts in /mnt/auto/usb0
>
> There is two lines where the problem arise.
>
> $util->run_command("ls -1 /mnt/auto/usb0 | wc -l");// it
2008. 01. 22, kedd keltezéssel 03.15-kor Robert Cummings ezt írta:
> On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 09:10 +0100, Zoltán Németh wrote:
> > 2008. 01. 21, hétfő keltezéssel 20.23-kor shiplu ezt írta:
> > > I configured autofs in my fedora so that when I plug any usb stick in
> > > /dev/sda1 it automatically mo
On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 09:10 +0100, Zoltán Németh wrote:
> 2008. 01. 21, hétfő keltezéssel 20.23-kor shiplu ezt írta:
> > I configured autofs in my fedora so that when I plug any usb stick in
> > /dev/sda1 it automatically mounts in /mnt/auto/usb0
> >
> > There is two lines where the problem arise
On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 09:20 +0100, Zoltán Németh wrote:
> 2008. 01. 22, kedd keltezéssel 03.15-kor Robert Cummings ezt írta:
> > On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 09:10 +0100, Zoltán Németh wrote:
> > > 2008. 01. 21, hétfő keltezéssel 20.23-kor shiplu ezt írta:
> > > > I configured autofs in my fedora so that
Ronald Wiplinger wrote:
> What is a good tool to coordinate a team of programmers efficiently?
>
> To give each one a different part of the project is a start, but it needs to
> get combined at some points to be a working project.
>
> Not to debug code you have written was a hint, to see actually
> On Jan 21, 2008 3:22 AM, nihilism machine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'm trying to create a function that will first take an array of
> > $_POSTs and give them key/value pairs like variables. For instance, if
> > i had $_POST['whatever'] = "whatever", that would be made into
> > $whatever = "
On Jan 21, 2008 3:22 AM, nihilism machine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm trying to create a function that will first take an array of
> $_POSTs and give them key/value pairs like variables. For instance, if
> i had $_POST['whatever'] = "whatever", that would be made into
> $whatever = "whatever",
hi guys,
I want to build php with firebirdDB (ibase) extension (for the purposes
of this exercise it could just as well be mysql) without installing firebird
on the local machine (i'm moving the DB to a seperate server) ...
I can't figure out how to do this apart from installing firebird, buildi
On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 17:25:06 +0100, "David Giragosian"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think this HTML is IE specific,
...
Not sure if you can do it on a tag by tag basis or not, nor what
versions it
might be limited by.
David
Thanks a lot!
This solution works fine in the three browser
Quoting Jochem Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
hi guys,
I want to build php with firebirdDB (ibase) extension (for the purposes
of this exercise it could just as well be mysql) without installing firebird
on the local machine (i'm moving the DB to a seperate server) ...
I can't figure out how to do
On Jan 21, 2008, at 4:14 PM, Dave Goodchild wrote:
Don't be scared of functions, no magic or mystery there, all you are
doing
is putting your code in a function like so:
function add($a, $b) {
return $a + $b;
}
..for example and calling it like so:
$a = 12;
$b = 100;
$sum = add(12, 13);
.
[snip]
Is PHP a correct approach to solve this tedious problem?? Can I access a
servers and get the results of a ls command for instance??
[/snip]
You can use some of PHP's functions, such as readdir() (roughly an ls in
PHP land http://www.php.net/readdir ). You can also use exec (to
execute) and
On Jan 21, 2008 11:39 PM, nihilism machine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> now my debug shows that with the following code, all of the
> $_POST['whatever'] values are blank.
>
>
> class forms {
>
> var $UserInput;
>
> // Forms to variables
> function forms() {
>
On Jan 22, 2008 8:44 AM, Jason Pruim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Jan 21, 2008, at 4:14 PM, Dave Goodchild wrote:
>
> > Don't be scared of functions, no magic or mystery there, all you are
> > doing
> > is putting your code in a function like so:
> >
> > function add($a, $b) {
> > return $a +
Jason Pruim wrote:
So all I have to do (At least to really simplify what I'm sure they can
do) is put the code I want to execute into the function and then just
list the variables as arguments? Such as:
function dbconnect ($host, $user, $pass, $database) {
mysqli_connect($host, $user, $pass, $
Quoting Jochem Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schreef:
Quoting Jochem Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
hi guys,
I want to build php with firebirdDB (ibase) extension (for the purposes
of this exercise it could just as well be mysql) without
installing firebird
on the local machine
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schreef:
Quoting Jochem Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
hi guys,
I want to build php with firebirdDB (ibase) extension (for the purposes
of this exercise it could just as well be mysql) without installing
firebird
on the local machine (i'm moving the DB to a seperate server) ...
On Jan 22, 2008 9:03 AM, Eric Butera <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> That is basically it. You're going to want to learn the why, not just
> the how though. There is a reason for creating functions and it isn't
> just code reuse. Think about when you want to change your export
> script. Say you ne
On Jan 22, 2008, at 10:32 AM, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Jan 22, 2008 9:03 AM, Eric Butera <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
That is basically it. You're going to want to learn the why, not
just
the how though. There is a reason for creating functions and it
isn't
just code reuse. Think about when
On Jan 22, 2008 3:26 AM, Robert Cummings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 09:20 +0100, Zoltán Németh wrote:
> > 2008. 01. 22, kedd keltezéssel 03.15-kor Robert Cummings ezt írta:
> > > On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 09:10 +0100, Zoltán Németh wrote:
> > > > 2008. 01. 21, hétfő keltezéss
On Jan 22, 2008 11:21 AM, Jason Pruim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've found many times, that you can find the "how" by googling for the
> right terms... It's the "Why" that you can't learn from code... That's
> when you gotta dig into books and ask questions :)
Not just that, but also citing
Robert Cummings wrote:
On Mon, 2008-01-21 at 18:01 -0500, Tom Ray [Lists] wrote:
Hey-
I'm trying to install PHP5 with mysql support and I keep running into
the same problem over and over again. I run the configuration with this:
--with-mysql=/usr/local/mysql and without fail I get this eve
On Jan 22, 2008 1:06 PM, TG <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I have a semi-good understanding of classes even if I don't totally 'grok'
> the benefits for the projects I've worked on so far.
>
> One thing that keeps smacking me in the face, though, is reverse
> engineering
> in order to make proper
I have a semi-good understanding of classes even if I don't totally 'grok'
the benefits for the projects I've worked on so far.
One thing that keeps smacking me in the face, though, is reverse engineering
in order to make proper changes to projects created by others using classes.
In particula
On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 12:42 -0500, Tom Ray [Lists] wrote:
> Robert Cummings wrote:
> > On Mon, 2008-01-21 at 18:01 -0500, Tom Ray [Lists] wrote:
> >
> >> Hey-
> >>
> >> I'm trying to install PHP5 with mysql support and I keep running into
> >> the same problem over and over again. I run the co
On Tue, January 22, 2008 12:06 pm, TG wrote:
> One thing that keeps smacking me in the face, though, is reverse
> engineering
> in order to make proper changes to projects created by others using
> classes.
OOP requires a great deal more high-level documentation, to tell what
classes do what and h
On Jan 22, 2008 2:40 PM, Richard Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At least, that would be one of the first features I'd put into an IDE,
> if I used OOP in PHP and if I used IDEs in the first place...
actually php-eclipse and pdt both have pretty solid oop support for php.
and theyre free.
the
On Mon, January 21, 2008 10:39 pm, nihilism machine wrote:
> $UserInput = strip_tags($text, $allowedtags);
$text is not defined, so it's blank, so now $UserInput is blank...
This also tells me that you aren't using E_ALL for development, which
is a BAD IDEA...
--
Some people have
On Tue, January 22, 2008 5:04 am, Jochem Maas wrote:
> I want to build php with firebirdDB (ibase) extension (for the
> purposes
> of this exercise it could just as well be mysql) without installing
> firebird
> on the local machine (i'm moving the DB to a seperate server) ...
>
> I can't figure ou
On Tue, January 22, 2008 1:40 am, Ronald Wiplinger wrote:
> What is a good tool to coordinate a team of programmers efficiently?
>
> To give each one a different part of the project is a start, but it
> needs to
> get combined at some points to be a working project.
>
> Not to debug code you have w
On Mon, January 21, 2008 7:23 pm, shiplu wrote:
> I configured autofs in my fedora so that when I plug any usb stick in
> /dev/sda1 it automatically mounts in /mnt/auto/usb0
>
> There is two lines where the problem arise.
>
> $util->run_command("ls -1 /mnt/auto/usb0 | wc -l");// it shows 13
>
On Mon, January 21, 2008 5:55 pm, Miguel Guirao wrote:
> Is PHP a correct approach to solve this tedious problem?? Can I access
> a
> servers and get the results of a ls command for instance??
I would use PHP, personally, since I know it best.
It might be easiest to install PHP on each box, and h
REFERER is set or not by the browser choice, and some browsers let you
turn it off.
It's completely unreliable.
Why not just have the download script accept search inputs, and
provide two links:
Records where name contains 'foo':
http://example.com/download.php?name=foo
Whole DB:
http://example
If you unset/NULL out *every* variable, then you should not run out of
RAM...
It might be a heck of a lot faster to LOAD DATA INFILE to a temp
table, and then use SQL statements to compare the data and
update/insert any altered/missing data...
I do something similar with about the same number of
On Mon, January 21, 2008 9:31 am, Tor Vidvei wrote:
> I'm developing a traning page for basic math. The answers are entered
> by
> the user in simple text input fields and the same page is returned
> (after
> having been processed by php) to the user with indications of
> correctness
> or error on
apache benchmark, aka "ab" comes with apache and lets you hit your
server as many times as you want.
Also see wget and valgrind/callgrind
For Windows users, there's something called SuperSmack or some equally
silly name... :-)
On Mon, January 21, 2008 3:50 am, Jochem Maas wrote:
> hi guys,
>
> I
You'd need to use a "look-ahead" or "look-behind" with PCRE to do this.
Search for a thread just last week involving quotes and HTML
attributes for an example.
PS
You could probably get the DB to ignore case in table names and table
fields with some kind of "set".
You also could probably just re
ANOTHER option would be to query the DB for table names and then its
fields.
You could then do a dirt-simple str_replace, because you would know
exactly what table names to expect.
//totally wrong code to give you the idea:
$tables = pg_query_something_about_table_names($connection);
foreach($tab
Hi everyone,
Been doing some reading on security and have decided that I should be
storing my include files outside of the document root... Which I
understand how to do it, but what I'm wondering, is say I write the
Next Killer App (tm). How would I port that code easily off of my
server
On Mon, January 21, 2008 10:03 am, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
> On Jan 21, 2008 10:19 AM, Eric Butera <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> I don't think making a single generic function to iterate over every
>> value in the GET/POST arrays is a very good idea. Each field on a
>> form can contain very differen
On Jan 22, 2008 3:59 PM, Richard Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, January 21, 2008 10:03 am, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
> > On Jan 21, 2008 10:19 AM, Eric Butera <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >> I don't think making a single generic function to iterate over every
> >> value in the GET/POST a
On Jan 22, 2008 3:57 PM, Jason Pruim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi everyone,
Hi, Jason!
> Been doing some reading on security and have decided that I should be
> storing my include files outside of the document root... Which I
> understand how to do it, but what I'm wondering, is say I writ
Robert Cummings wrote:
On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 12:42 -0500, Tom Ray [Lists] wrote:
Robert Cummings wrote:
On Mon, 2008-01-21 at 18:01 -0500, Tom Ray [Lists] wrote:
Hey-
I'm trying to install PHP5 with mysql support and I keep running into
the same problem over and over again.
On Jan 22, 2008 4:21 PM, Daniel Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Jan 22, 2008 3:57 PM, Jason Pruim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi everyone,
>
>Hi, Jason!
>
> > Been doing some reading on security and have decided that I should be
> > storing my include files outside of the document roo
Thanks a lot Eric, I read those links and are really interesting.
The solution of the problem was changing the "OEM character conversion"
option of MSSql (see attached image) as Frank answer me in PHP-Windows list.
Original answer of Frank:
-Original Message-
From: Frank M. Kromann [mai
TG schreef:
I have a semi-good understanding of classes even if I don't totally 'grok'
the benefits for the projects I've worked on so far.
One thing that keeps smacking me in the face, though, is reverse engineering
in order to make proper changes to projects created by others using classes.
Vishal Patel schreef:
who the fuck are you and why the fuck are you emailing me
I'm fucking me actually. and I'm fucking mailing a fucking mailing list which
apparently your fucking subscribed to. So now your fucking up to speed.
Any other fucking questions?
On Jan 22, 2008 11:15 PM, Jochem
On Jan 22, 2008 6:15 PM, Jochem Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> TG schreef:
> > I have a semi-good understanding of classes even if I don't totally
> 'grok'
> > the benefits for the projects I've worked on so far.
> >
> > One thing that keeps smacking me in the face, though, is reverse
> enginee
Vishal Patel schreef:
i dont know why the hell im on it so please whoever did this, i wish
they would stop fucking about with my account. please can you unsuscribe
me to all such mailing lists as at the moment im recieving about 10 new
emails a minute about all this stuff which im sure you can
I have a file of my own functions that I include in many places. One
of them uses mysql_real_escape_string, however, it may be called in a
context that will or will not connect to a mysql server, and worse,
may already be connected. So I must avoid connecting. However, when I
run the script without
any ideas why this does not work?
class upload {
function upload() {
upload::uploader();
}
function uploader() {
$FileName = basename($_FILES['upload1']['name']);
if (move_uploaded_file($_FILES['upload1']['
Dotan Cohen wrote:
I have a file of my own functions that I include in many places. One
of them uses mysql_real_escape_string, however, it may be called in a
context that will or will not connect to a mysql server, and worse,
may already be connected. So I must avoid connecting. However, when I
r
On Jan 22, 2008, at 5:01 PM, nihilism machine
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
any ideas why this does not work?
class upload {
function upload() {
upload::uploader();
}
function uploader() {
$FileName = basename($_FILES['upload1']['name']);
if (move_uploaded_file($
On Jan 22, 2008 8:01 PM, nihilism machine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> any ideas why this does not work?
>
>
> class upload {
>
> function upload() {
> upload::uploader();
> }
>
> function uploader() {
> $FileName = basename($_FILES['upload1']
On MOST setups, you might have:
/yourhomedirectory
/httpd_docs_or_something_like_that
/index.php
/page2.php
/includes
/globals.inc
/connect.inc
/sql
So, pretty much, you'd do something like:
tar -cvf my_site.tar http_docs includes
gzip my_site.tar
And
nihilism machine wrote:
any ideas why this does not work?
1) the field in the form might not be 'upload1'.
2) the file is too big to upload (> max_upload_size)
3) the /tmp folder might not be writable or full
4) the folder you're trying to write into is not writable (or the drive
is full)
5)
On Jan 22, 2008 8:09 PM, Richard Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Nothing peeves me more than some badly-conceived web-app with no way
> to move the include files out of the web-tree.
You may disagree with me on this here, Rich, but the way I do it
is to have a single include_files.php file
On Sun, January 20, 2008 5:30 pm, jekillen wrote:
> I am developing an application that uses php with Apache.
> A user requests a script file from a web site and the server
> takes such things as $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDRESS']
You *DO* understand that large-scale ISP's users will change their IP
addre
On 23/01/2008, Chris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dotan Cohen wrote:
> > I have a file of my own functions that I include in many places. One
> > of them uses mysql_real_escape_string, however, it may be called in a
> > context that will or will not connect to a mysql server, and worse,
> > may alr
On Sun, January 20, 2008 1:57 pm, dg wrote:
> I'd appreciate any insights, or source suggestions regarding site
> traffic and necessary adjustments.
>
> For example, I'm using a simple digital download page for an indie
> artist. Not a ton of traffic, not a ton of concurrent requests.
>
> Was thin
On Sat, January 19, 2008 2:11 pm, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
> http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.crypt.php
> has a second parameter, $salt, which, if not supplied will be
> automatically
> generated and presumably become a prefix or suffix of the returned
> string.
Or, in some algorithms, gets buried
On Sat, January 19, 2008 8:24 pm, Eric Butera wrote:
> I always make sure that I use a site specific salt which is just
> appended on the user supplied value. I started doing that when I read
> that people had created huge databases of hashed values that they can
> just search on. At least this w
Richard Lynch wrote:
On Sat, January 19, 2008 8:24 pm, Eric Butera wrote:
I always make sure that I use a site specific salt which is just
appended on the user supplied value. I started doing that when I read
that people had created huge databases of hashed values that they can
just search on.
On Tue, January 22, 2008 7:17 pm, Daniel Brown wrote:
> On Jan 22, 2008 8:09 PM, Richard Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Nothing peeves me more than some badly-conceived web-app with no way
>> to move the include files out of the web-tree.
>
> You may disagree with me on this here, Rich,
On Tue, January 22, 2008 7:01 pm, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> I have a file of my own functions that I include in many places. One
> of them uses mysql_real_escape_string, however, it may be called in a
> context that will or will not connect to a mysql server, and worse,
> may already be connected. So
On Sat, January 19, 2008 12:51 pm, Per Jessen wrote:
> David Powers wrote:
>> When I subscribed to the PHP general mailing list I did not give
>> permission for this. This is an international list, and what you're
>> doing breaks EU privacy laws, and possibly those in other countries
>> too.
>
> Hm
On 23/01/2008, Richard Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, January 22, 2008 7:01 pm, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> > I have a file of my own functions that I include in many places. One
> > of them uses mysql_real_escape_string, however, it may be called in a
> > context that will or will not con
On Tue, January 22, 2008 7:43 pm, Chris wrote:
> Richard Lynch wrote:
>> On Sat, January 19, 2008 8:24 pm, Eric Butera wrote:
>>> I always make sure that I use a site specific salt which is just
>>> appended on the user supplied value. I started doing that when I
>>> read
>>> that people had cre
I wrote an authentication class in php4. The sessions dont seem to be
working with internet explorer, just with FF. here is the code below,
a cookies notice pops up when you try and login:
mysql_connect('','','') or die('ERROR: Could not connect to
database');
mysql_selec
Richard Lynch wrote:
On Tue, January 22, 2008 7:43 pm, Chris wrote:
Richard Lynch wrote:
On Sat, January 19, 2008 8:24 pm, Eric Butera wrote:
I always make sure that I use a site specific salt which is just
appended on the user supplied value. I started doing that when I
read
that people had
On Jan 22, 2008 6:00 PM, Leticia Larrosa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Thanks a lot Eric, I read those links and are really interesting.
>
> The solution of the problem was changing the "OEM character conversion"
> option of MSSql (see attached image) as Frank answer me in PHP-Windows list.
>
> Or
This is a typical .NET vs. PHP interop problem, and happens because the
.NET services (or clients) expect the payload to be namespace qualified
as you have figured out.
I too have looked into this with PHP SOAP extension, and what I gathered
is that the WSDL mode implementation needs to pick the
On Jan 22, 2008 9:15 PM, nihilism machine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I wrote an authentication class in php4. The sessions dont seem to be
> working with internet explorer, just with FF. here is the code below,
> a cookies notice pops up when you try and login:
Hi,
I took a quick look at your c
On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 16:47 -0500, Tom Ray [Lists] wrote:
>
> >
> This is how I setup mysql:
> #upgrades: cd mysql
> tar -zxf mysql-version-x.tar.gz
> cp -R * /usr/local/mysql
> cd /usr/local/mysql
> chown -R mysql:mysql *
> scripts/mysql_install_db --user=mysql
> /usr/local/mysql/bin/mysqld_sa
On Jan 22, 2008 9:54 PM, Eric Butera <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I realize this link I'm posting is called "auth"
> too, but that wasn't my choice.
that was kind of funny after your initial criticizm above, but to solars
credit,
its the auth 'package' so really the name isnt too bad, id say.
On Jan 22, 2008 2:40 AM, Ronald Wiplinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What is a good tool to coordinate a team of programmers efficiently?
that is a big question, primarily because there are many facets of
coordination with different tools to help out.
obviously version control is one of the f
alright, so you guys have responded and im really appreciative.
you have me thinking now..
so what are the real issues here?
1. portability
2. security (obviously)
im wondering now if crypt() is really even so practical. especially
considering the deal where only 2 characters are prepended
On Wed, 2008-01-23 at 00:40 -0500, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
> alright, so you guys have responded and im really appreciative.
> you have me thinking now..
> so what are the real issues here?
>
>1. portability
>2. security (obviously)
>
> im wondering now if crypt() is really even so practical
On Jan 18, 2008 5:24 PM, Richard Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you are trying to keep the names and orders in "parallel" you need
> to do something not unlike:
>
> while (list($key, $name) = each($names)){
> $order = $orders[$key];
> $query = "update whatever set order = $order where nam
Richard Lynch wrote:
> You'll also have a VERY tough time trying to ram EU privacy laws
> through a non-EU court, if Dan is not in the EU...
Forcing American law on other people of the world has not been a problem
for America, why should it be a problem for the EU? :-(
> You *know* it's an inter
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