I need to code something like that to print value of javascript in php
<?php
$url = ( Value of <script>document.write(top.location.href);</script> );
echo ''.$url.'';
?>
Update:
I need this to break frames, block proxy websites and bots so $_SERVER not useful
Please can anyone help me ?
Thank you
No, that's not possible because PHP (server-side) is run before javascript (client side) code. You can do the opposite though. You will have to resort to one of these:
AJAX
Hidden Field
Query String
Though, if you want to read the current page URL, you could use:
$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']
To do what you're doing in PHP you could do $url = $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'];
you might not be looking at this the right way. you can see the current path in the url by looking at this variable
echo $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];
Read More
Update:
Since you want to prevent your site for being under an iframe, you can google frame busting script, it is done entirely in javascript.
Related
e.g. i have page with url http://mysite.com?page=3&var=10 also there is form on page.
When form submitted there some actions in php but i need to remove this ?page=3&var=10 after form was submitted somehow is there way compatible with all browsers trough PHP without mod_rewrite?
This is an old topic, but just in case anyone else is searching for this in the future, you can use the javascript replaceState to change the history and browser bar label. A simple php function to do this:
function set_url( $url )
{
echo("<script>history.replaceState({},'','$url');</script>");
}
Then would simply call this function with the desired url (presumably dropping the post variables):
set_url("http://example.com");
A page reload or a back after calling another page will now have the new url location in the history.
I think that using POST may be a more elegant solution, but if you must use GET this is a work around.
If you're using action=index.php, then all values will be posted to index php, ?page=3&var=10 will be automatically removed.
If you want to post to the same page you can either use 'action=index.php?page=3&var=10' or action=<?php echo $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] ?>
You can check at the beginning of the page if something submitted and then redirect to whatever you want with header('Location: http://www.example.com/'); More about header function http://php.net/manual/en/function.header.php
Yeah, the solution is quite simple (even if not really SEO friendly):
<?php
header("Location: http://mysite.com")
?>
just for information...why do you need it?
use parse_str to get the query string as an associative array that is easy to modify. Then use http_build_query to convert the associative array into a query string.
$queryString = $s['QUERY_STRING'];
$params = array();
parse_str($queryString, $params);
//change $params as needed
$queryString = http_build_query($params);
if ($queryString) {
$queryString = '?'.$queryString;
}
return preg_replace("/\\?.*/s","",$s['REQUEST_URI']).$queryString;
preg_replace("/\\?.*/s","",$s['REQUEST_URI']) removes the original query string allowing you to replace it.
Does this work for you?
header('Location:/');
mod_rewrite cannot affect what's displayed in the user's browser address bar, UNLESS the rewrite does an externally visible redirect. Otherwise it only rewriting things within the webserver, and that's invisible to the user.
If you want to affect the user's address bar, you'll have to do a redirect via header('Location: ...') after the form's finished processing.
So I have a test version of my site. In the header of the test server, I'd like to include a link to same page on the live server.
Is there an HTML or PHP means of "knowing" what the current page is?
Click me!
or alternatively,
Click me!
With PHP you can use:
$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];
A hyperlink would look like this:
Click for current page
Note that PHP_SELF will show only the filename, and not the GET params.
If the url is like: index.php?page=aboutus
REQUEST_URI would be index.php?page=aboutus
while PHP_SELF would be index.php
Take a look at: http://php.net/manual/en/reserved.variables.server.php
There is JavaScript's window.location - Object, which makes many useful information available. There is also
$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']
on the PHP side, as mentioned in the other answers.
Suppose that your test server is http://test.site.com, and your live server is http://site.com, then you could just use an absolute URL:
thepage.html on live server
In PHP, $_SERVER variables will get URL parts. In JavaScript, document.URL is the place to start. :)
I'm using a form to submit some post information to a PHP script. After the script finishes, I want it to redirect right back to the page the user came from. Right now I'm just using header() with a static URL. I've found a ton of very conflicting information about this around the internet, so I'm wondering what StackOverflow thinks.
Use HTTP_REFERER:
header('Location: ' . $_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER']);
access the $_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER'] variable and redirect to this. Should do the trick.
the way i would do it is use a session variable to store the current page URL everytime it is accessed.
$_SESSION['last_url'] = <get current url>
replace your static url in the header with $_SESSION['last_url']. Depending on how you implement your PHP, you can use search google for "current url php" or just $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] (stackoverflow doesnt allow me to put more than 1 link!)
Use REQUEST_URI But watch out for that presiding slash/
I want to do something but cant figure out how to do this (i m newbie in php)
suppose, i have a list of URL's which shows live with this preg_replace,
$html = preg_replace('/\s(\w+:\/\/)(\S+)/', ' GO ', $html);
my output is like
http://localhost/get.php?url=http://yahoo.com
its obvious that you can view that links at output page, now i want to hide them at front page and make them clickable and working
something like we can change links into variables and then call them by clicking and something works in backgroud which can perform same thing as we are clicking on the link at front page
ya it seems bit confusing :(
you could save the url into a $_SESSION vars and when some users click the link retrive the url from $_SESSION and redirect to it...
//page1 - parse, save link in session and print a call to page2
<?php
session_start();
$_SESSION['url'] = preg_replace('/\s(\w+:\/\/)(\S+)/', ' GO ', $html);
....
echo 'GO';
?>
//page2
<?php
session_start();
header('Location: '.$_SESSION['url']);
?>
If i undeerstood what you meant...
Obviously now I used $_SESSION['url'] as a single string, but you can use a multidimensional array intead...
UPDATE:
anyway is better if you use an array on script..
example: http://www.test.org/go.php?page=# (where # is a number)
<?php
$array=("http://www.google.com","http://stackoverfloc.com","ecc");
//you can add more contorl in if statement, like between etc...
if (is_numeric($_GET['page']) header('Location: '.$array[$_GET['page']]);
?>
I'm sorry, maybe I'm not understanding quite well, but, isn't best approch use an array for in side server and use another Get variable to do that?
for example ?link=yahoo
and then
find link in array of url?
BY the way, I'm using NoScript and reports me like a warning..
You build up links with looking like this:
yourdomain.com/redirector.ph?url=#
where # represents an identifier.
In redirector.php you check if you know that identifier and send the redirect HTTP Header:
header("Location: http://www.example.com/");
Important Note:
You may not send any data before sending the header and the code after sending it won't be executed.
Info
http://php.net/manual/en/function.header.php
EDIT
Using this header is not absolutely proper in regards to standard, but it's not too far off, as the response really is at another location.
How do I make it so that I can make a thing at the end of the address where the .php is and then tell it to do certain things. For example pull up a page like this:
sampardee.com/index.php?page=whatever
Help?
Anything else I could do with this?
This is generally achieved with the global php array $_GET. You can use it as an associative array to 'get' whatever variable you name in the url. For example your url above:
//this gives the $page variable the value 'whatever'
$page = $_GET['page'];
if($page == 'whatever'){
//do whatever
}
elseif($page == 'somethingelse'){
//do something else
}
Check out the php documentation for more information:
$_GET documentation
and there's a tutorial here:
Tutorial using QUERY_STRING and _GET
A small improvement over Brett's code:
if (array_key_exists('page', $_GET) === false)
{
$_GET['page'] = 'defaultPage';
}
$page = $_GET['page'];
// ... Brett Bender's code here
$_GET is usually used if you are sending the information to another page using the URL.
$_POST is usually used if you are sending the information from a form.
If you ever need to write your code so that it can accept information sent using both methods, you can use $_REQUEST. Make sure you check what information is being sent though, especially if you are using it with a database.
From your question it looks like you are using this to display different content on the page?
Perhaps you want to use something like a switch to allow only certain page names to be used?
i.e.
$pageName=$_REQUEST['page'];
switch($pageName){
case 'home':$include='home.php';break;
case 'about':$include='about.php';break;
case default:$include='error.php';break;
}
include($include);
This is a really simplified example, but unless the $page variable is either home or about, the website will display an error page.
Hope it helps!
I'm not quite sure what you're asking, but I think you're asking how to use GET requests.
Make GET requests against any PHP page as follows:
www.mysite.com/page.php?key1=value1&key2=value2
Now, from within PHP, you'll be able to see key1 -> value1, key2 -> value2.
Access the GET hash from within PHP as follows:
$myVal1 = $_GET['key1'] #resolves to "value1"
$myVal2 = $_GET['key2'] #resolves to "value2"
From here, play with your GET variables as you see fit.
The system of adding page parameters to a URL is know as HTTP GET (as distinct from HTTP POST, and some others less commonly used).
Take a look at this W3 schools page about GET in PHP and ahve a play about in getting parameters and using them in your PHP code.
Have fun!