Well, that would make sense. Now is this something I need to configure
in the Apache or the PHP config file? 

On Mon, 2002-08-19 at 14:27, Rasmus Lerdorf wrote:
> If these domains are on the same physical server, include them directly
> via the full filesystem path.  If they are actually on different physical
> machines, you will need to configure those other machines to let you get
> the non-parsed PHP code through them.  Your problam right now is that the
> site2.mydomain.com machine is executing the PHP and only giving you the
> parsed result.  You need to configure Apache to not parse the file with
> PHP when requested by your script.
> 
> -Rasmus
> 
> On 19 Aug 2002, Greg Macek wrote:
> 
> > Hello,
> >
> > I've searched the list and the manual and am still a bit confused.
> > Here's what I'd like to do. We have a bunch of internal sites that all
> > use the same username/password. One is already setup with a function to
> > authenticate this to a database. However, each login page is coming from
> > a different sub-domain, such as site1.mydomain.com. The login functions
> > resides in a PHP file on site2.mydomain.com. So it does this:
> >
> > <?
> > // This page on site1.mydomain.com
> >
> > include ("http://site2.mydomain.com/functions.php";);
> >
> > if (loginUser($username,$password)) {
> >     // do stuff here
> >     // redirect
> > }
> > else { ... }
> >
> > ?>
> >
> > Right now my local script doesn't find the function I'm trying to use.
> > What am I missing here? Is it not possible to include a php file (and
> > its functions and variables) across domains?
> >
> > - Greg
> >
> >
> >
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> >
> 
> 
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