On 18 May 2006, at 21:11, Stut wrote:
The value in that variable is coming from the web server not PHP. I
suggest you change the web server configuration so it's listening
on specific v4 IPs only rather than all IPs. See the docs for your
web server for details on how to do that.
Yup, tha
On Thu, May 18, 2006 2:22 pm, Marcus Bointon wrote:
> I'm running PHP 5.1.4 on OS X. When I look at $_SERVER
> ['REMOTE_ADDR'], it seems to contain an ipv6 address rather than an
> ipv4 one (at present it's giving me 'fe80::1' instead of the usual
> dotted quad), and that confuses the hell out of t
Marcus Bointon wrote:
I'm running PHP 5.1.4 on OS X. When I look at $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'],
it seems to contain an ipv6 address rather than an ipv4 one (at present
it's giving me 'fe80::1' instead of the usual dotted quad), and that
confuses the hell out of things like MySQL's INET_ATON() func
I'm running PHP 5.1.4 on OS X. When I look at $_SERVER
['REMOTE_ADDR'], it seems to contain an ipv6 address rather than an
ipv4 one (at present it's giving me 'fe80::1' instead of the usual
dotted quad), and that confuses the hell out of things like MySQL's
INET_ATON() function. I have ipv6
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