P.S will be deleting the urls that you created, hope you dont mind, coz
just in case someone later keeps using the url you posted via the
archives...
Hang on, I want to post it on Digg first
Hehe, no fear there... all my posts on dig never get me more than a few clicks
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Stut [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Iv Ray [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Jon Drukman [EMAIL
PROTECTED]; php-general@lists.php.net
Sent: Thursday, June 19, 2008 4:40:59 PM
Subject: Re: [PHP] Re: Search like php.net's URL thingy
Ry,
Make sure you also disable the ability to add in your own
At 11:35 AM -0700 6/20/08, Ryan S wrote:
Thats why I love this place... theres so many ways to skin a cat
Yeah, but the cat ain't going to like any of them. (Foxworthy)
Cheers,
tedd
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clip
Thats why I love this place... theres so many ways to skin a cat
Yeah, but the cat ain't going to like any of them. (Foxworthy)
/clip
Hehe good one!
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On Fri, Jun 20, 2008 at 2:35 PM, Ryan S [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ah, the never ending loop... thanks for pointing that out.
Thats why I love this place... theres so many ways to skin a cat and here
they tell you the ways you have forgotten or overlooked.
As long as you remember to give
On Fri, 2008-06-20 at 14:42 -0400, tedd wrote:
At 11:35 AM -0700 6/20/08, Ryan S wrote:
Thats why I love this place... theres so many ways to skin a cat
Yeah, but the cat ain't going to like any of them. (Foxworthy)
I'd have to argue that the above claim is only true if the cat is still
clip
I really dont see what anybody could gain by spamming this form but
anyway it does check to make sure the person submits something that
starts with http via strstr (after bringing it down to lowercase,
thats why i didnt use stristr, and because it checks just http,
https too is
Ry,
Make sure you also disable the ability to add in your own site,
and even similar competitors such as tinyurl.com.
Otherwise, you'll get something like this:
http://ezee.se/30
--
/Daniel P. Brown
Dedicated Servers - Intel 2.4GHz w/2TB bandwidth/mo. starting at just
Ryan S wrote:
Thanks for replying m8, but if you check the rest of the thread you will see
this has alraedy been solved and the result is
http://ezee.se/ezeeurl.php?do=1
Cheers!
Ryan
How do you protect this thing from being spammed?
I do not know why somebody would spam it, but I have had
Why is an ErrorDocument insufficient or not the elegant way?
It accomplishes the goal in a clean way, no?
It's *WRONG*. ErrorDocument still preserves the 404 error code, it just
gives it a prettier face. If the page really is there, returning a 404 for
it is not correct. Search engines
On Tue, Jun 17, 2008 at 3:22 PM, Jon Drukman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nate Tallman wrote:
Why is an ErrorDocument insufficient or not the elegant way?
It accomplishes the goal in a clean way, no?
It's *WRONG*. ErrorDocument still preserves the 404 error code, it just
gives it a prettier
On Wed, Jun 18, 2008 at 9:19 AM, Nate Tallman
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not to beat a dead horse, but why would you *not* want to preserve the 404?
If it's a bad url anyways, you probably *want* to return a 404 (albeit
prettier) and you probably *don't* want search engines indexing it.
the
clip
Thanks for replying m8, but if you check the rest of the thread you will see
this has alraedy been solved and the result is
http://ezee.se/ezeeurl.php?do=1
Cheers!
Ryan
How do you protect this thing from being spammed?
I do not know why somebody would spam it, but I have had all
On 18 Jun 2008, at 23:40, Ryan S wrote:
clip
Thanks for replying m8, but if you check the rest of the thread you
will see this has alraedy been solved and the result is
http://ezee.se/ezeeurl.php?do=1
Cheers!
Ryan
How do you protect this thing from being spammed?
I do not know why
Ryan S wrote:
Hey!
Thanks for replying.
Digging a bit more i found
IfModule mod_rewrite.c
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule ^([a-z][0-9][A-Z][aA0-zZ0])$ jj.php?show=$1
/IfModule
But it does not work :( do you see any fault with the above?
this is an apache issue, not a php issue, so you'll
Nate Tallman wrote:
Why is an ErrorDocument insufficient or not the elegant way?
It accomplishes the goal in a clean way, no?
It's *WRONG*. ErrorDocument still preserves the 404 error code, it just
gives it a prettier face. If the page really is there, returning a 404
for it is not
It's *WRONG*.
So are vegetables. Long live the waffle!
BTW, anyone seen this:
http://code.google.com/apis/chart/ ...?
More to the point, is anyone using it commercially?
--
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Employ me:
http://www.phpguru.org/cv
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| Access SSH
Thanks for replying m8, but if you check the rest of the thread you will see
this has alraedy been solved and the result is
http://ezee.se/ezeeurl.php?do=1
Cheers!
Ryan
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Ryan S wrote:
Hey,
one of the things that make the php.net site so cool is how easy it is to find
info for a function or a list of topics.. eg:
http://php.net/arrays
http://php.net/count
I'm sure nearly all of you reading this have done it more times than you would
care to count, i'm trying
Why not just set:
ErrorDocument 404 /path/to/some/script.php
Then check $SERVER['REDIRECT_URL'] for the failed request.
On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 2:41 PM, Shawn McKenzie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ryan S wrote:
Hey,
one of the things that make the php.net site so cool is how easy it is to
find
ErrorDocument 404 /path/to/some/script.php
* $_SERVER['REDIRECT_URL']
(somehow misplaced underscore)
On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 2:50 PM, Nate Tallman
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Why not just set:
ErrorDocument 404 /path/to/some/script.php
Then check $SERVER['REDIRECT_URL'] for the failed request.
As far as I remember, errordocument still send the code, in this case
404 to the client. In the case of IE, this will display IEs built-in
error doc if the server supplied one is 512 Bytes. Maybe other
implications for spiders also. I might be wrong, but this is from some
old memory.
Not true, Apache does return a 404, but IE will use the custom 404 page if
it is available.
Nate
On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 2:57 PM, Shawn McKenzie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As far as I remember, errordocument still send the code, in this case 404
to the client. In the case of IE, this will
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;Q294807
Also, why would you want Google let's say, to receive a 404 Not Found
header for http://php.net/arrays???
-Shawn
Nate Tallman wrote:
Not true, Apache does return a 404, but IE will use the custom 404
page if it is available.
Correction for my statement:
As long as the content length is greater than 512 bytes, IE will display the
content from the 404. Less than that and it will display it's own pretty
message.
http://www.404-error-page.com/404-error-page-too-short-problem-microsoft-ie.shtml
clip
As far as I remember, errordocument still send the code, in this case
404 to the client. In the case of IE, this will display IEs built-in
error doc if the server supplied one is 512 Bytes. Maybe other
implications for spiders also. I might be wrong, but this is from some
old memory.
Why is an ErrorDocument insufficient or not the elegant way?
It accomplishes the goal in a clean way, no?
Nate
On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 3:25 PM, Yeti [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
still telling Ryan to produce errors is insufficient or at least not the
elegant way
On 6/5/08, Nate Tallman [EMAIL
Hey again,
First of all please note that i added a [0.T] (= off topic ) to the subject so
if you dont want to continue with something OT, now's the time...
Ok... for anyone thats curious as to why i wanted this.. just completed my
version of tinyURL... except, its even more tiny!! Have
On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 4:52 PM, Ryan S [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hey again,
First of all please note that i added a [0.T] (= off topic ) to the subject
so if you dont want to continue with something OT, now's the time...
Ok... for anyone thats curious as to why i wanted this.. just
Hello,
php.net uses a 404 error handler for this, and most mirrors store url data
in an sqlite database. A simple $_SERVER dump in your 404 page will show you
which variables are available.
Regards,
Philip
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