Can anybody clarify this, please?
Nuno
----- Original Message -----
> ID: 27345
> Updated by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Reported By: php_bugs at ecora dot de
> Status: Open
> Bug Type: Documentation problem
> PHP Version: Irrelevant
> New Comment:
>
> I couldn't reproduce this in PHP 5.
>
> header("HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found"); print "Status: 404"
>
> and
>
> header("Status: 404 Not Found"); prints "Status: 404 Not Found"
>
>
> Can anybody check this in PHP 4?
>
>
> Previous Comments:
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> [2004-02-22 05:10:36] php_bugs at ecora dot de
>
> Description:
> ------------
> Hi,
>
> <Documentation>
> header("HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found");
> [...]
> Note: In PHP 3, this only works when PHP is compiled as an Apache
> module. You can achieve the same effect using the Status header.
> header("Status: 404 Not Found");
> </Documentation>
>
> IMHO this is not correct. Because the HTTP-status-header (also
> Content-Type- and Location-Header) is always a server parsed header,
> when PHP (PHP3, PHP4, PHP5 or also Perl or Python, ...) runs via CGI.
>
> The official CGI Specification (see http://www.w3.org/CGI/):
> http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/out.html
>
> That means not only in PHP3 also in PHP4 or PHP5: When PHP runs via
> CGI, then you have to write:
> header("Status: 404 Not Found"); instead of header("HTTP/1.0 404 Not
> Found");
>
>
>
>
> Reproduce code:
> ---------------
> When i try to send a header("HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found"); on my
> installation (Apache 1.3.29 + PHP 4.2.3 CGI on Linux) then i receive a
> 500 internal server error
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
> --
> Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=27345&edit=1
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