I am relatively new to web-development and am encountering an issue using some inline PHP code.
The page is a JavaServer Page (.jsp) and I am trying to implement a JFormer form.
When I add my JFormer PHP code to my .jsp page, it just displays as plain-text and refuses to cooperate with me (even when using demo code from the site's documentation). Is this because of some sort of incompatibility between using PHP on a .jsp page?
If that is the case, what are some work-around that I could use? Should I use an iframe?
I need to preserve the use of the .jsp page and would prefer very much to use JFormer, but if I have to I can toss it.
Example of something similar to what I am doing can be found at: http://www.jformer.com/documentation/getting-started/installation/
JSP and PHP are both server-side languages. As such, all scripting in a given file must be processed by the required engines on the server to produce the necessary HTML output.
I suppose it is possible to rig multiple engines inline to process first JSP, then PHP, but that seems cumbersome and error prone.
Instead, consider using an iframe (as you suggested) or load the PHP content via an AJAX call.
PHP is executed by a PHP interpreter and output HTML. JSP is compiled and executed by a Java VM, and output HTML. You can't execute PHP inside JSP code (and vice-versa). It's like if you put Chinese words inside an English speech. Nobody can understand.
I think the point of this is that the examples for jFormer use PHP for the server side logic. If you want to integrate jFormer into your JSP project, learn how to code the equivalent PHP functionality in JSP. You may need to create a Servlet for portions of the logic.
It looks like JFormer requires PHP so you can't make this work on a JSP page easily. You can rewrite the JFormer PHP code in Java/JSP but this may be a lot of work.
The container (like Tomcat) you're using may be able to run PHP scripts as CGI scripts. If you do this you can't easily share session information between PHP and Java. Javascript could be used to accomplish this, but beware of security issues. If you still want to use JSP you could make an iframe that points to the PHP page, as you said.
Here's an article on setting that up for Tomcat:
http://wiki.apache.org/tomcat/UsingPhp
Disclaimer: I don't know JFormer.
Related
I am currently trying to load an HTML page via cURL. I can retrieve the HTML content, but part is loaded later via scripting (AJAX POST). I can not recover the HTML part (this is a table).
Is it possible to load a page entirely?
Thank you for your answers
No, you cannot do this.
CURL does nothing more than download a file from a URL -- it doesn't care whether it's HTML, Javascript, and image, a spreadsheet, or any other arbitrary data; it just downloads. It doesn't run anything or parse anything or display anything, it just downloads.
You are asking for something more than that. You need to download, parse the result as HTML, then run some Javascript that downloads something else, then run more Javascript that parses that result into more HTML and inserts it into the original HTML.
What you're basically looking for is a full-blown web browser, not CURL.
Since your goal involves "running some Javascript code", it should be fairly clear that it is not acheivable without having a Javascript interpreter available. This means that it is obviously not going to work inside of a PHP program (*). You're going to need to move beyond PHP. You're going to need a browser.
The solution I'd suggest is to use a very specialised browser called PhantomJS. This is actually a full Webkit browser, but without a user interface. It's specifically designed for automated testing of websites and other similar tasks. Your requirement fits it pretty well: write a script to get PhantomJS to open your URL, wait for the table to finish rendering, and grab the finished HTML code.
You'll need to install PhantomJS on your server, and then use a library like this one to control it from your PHP code.
I hope that helps.
(*) yes, I'm aware of the PHP extension that provides a JS interpreter inside of PHP, and it would provide a way to solve the problem, but it's experimental, unfinished, would be still difficult to implement as a solution, and I don't think it's a particularly good idea anyway, so let's not consider it for the purposes of this answer.
No, the only way you can do that is if you make a separate curl request to ajax request and put the two results together afterwards.
I have a small script that pulls HTML from another site using Javascript.
I want to include that static HTML that gets pulled in a PHP page without any of the Javascript code appearing in the final PHP page that gets displayed.
I tried doing an include of the file with the Javascript code in the PHP page, but it just included the actual Javascript and not the results of the Javascript.
So how would I go about doing this?
You would need to fetch the page, execute the JavaScript in it, then extract the data you wanted from the generated DOM.
The usual approach to this is to use a web automation tool such as Selenium.
You simply can't.
You need to understand that PHP and Javascript operate on different places, PHP on the server and Javascript on the client.
Your only solution is to change the way all this is done and use "file_get_contents(url)" from PHP to get the same content your javascript used to get. This way, there is no javascript anymore and you can still pre-process your page with distant content.
You wouldn't be able to do this directly from within PHP, since you'd need to run Javascript code.
I'd suggest passing the URL (and any required actions such as click event, etc) to a headless browser such as Phantom or Zombie, and capturing the DOM from it once the JS engine has done it's work.
You could also use a real browser, but of course you don't need a UI in your case, and it might actually get in the way of what you're trying to do, so a headless browser might be better.
This sort of thing would normally be used for automated testing of a site (ie Functional Testing).
There is a PHP tool named Mink which can run these sorts of scripts from within a PHP program. It is aimed at writing test scripts, but I would imagine you could use it for your purposes.
Hope that helps.
i'm converting in PHP5 a quite old ASP project that was using a lot of server-side javascript.
is there a way to use that code or i'll have to rewrite everything in PHP?
EDIT
this is how the code is embedded in ASP
<!-- #include file=helper.js -->
snippet of my helper.js
<script language=javascript runat=server>
//here are the functions
</script>
then in ASP is see that functions are called as usual ie
response.write myJsfunction()
btw, if i have to rewrite the code, i'll do on my own, not using any software
The answer is "you need to rewrite everything in PHP" PHP does not as is support Javascript on the server-side in reuseable manner. Also, the automatic code transformations are very klunky: clean up work takes more time than building everything by hand from the beginning.
However, you can run server-side Javascript code with tools like node.js and backbone.js. Mixing with PHP code is no-go though as these projects will provide their own, non-PHP-compatible, web-servers.
I presume you mean jscript? Have you tried asp2php?
The situation is next:
I have php file, which parses a web-page. on that web-page is a phone number and it's digits are mixed with each other. The only way to put each digit on the correct place is to use some JS functions (on the client side). So, when I execute that php file in linux console, it gives me all that I need, except js function's result (no wonder - JavaScript is not a server-side language). So all I see from JS - only a code, that I have written.
The question: can I execute js files via php and how?
Results of a quick google search (terms = javascript engine php)
J4P5 -- not developed since 2005 [BAD](according to its News)
PECL package spidermonkey
a 2008 post by jeresig points to PHPJS but can't see when it was last updated.
I'm sure you'll find many more links on that google search.
Alternatively:
you say that the digits are scrambled and you need to "unscramble" them using js. Can you code that unscrambling logic into a PHP function and just use it? Will sure save you a lot of trouble, but if learning to use js in php is what you're after, then its a whole different story...
Zend tutorial: "Using javascript in PHP with PECL and spidermonkey"?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Server-side_JavaScript_solutions
Alternatively, PHP has simple functions for executing other programs and retrieving their output (I used this along with GPG once to create a PHP file manager which could live-encrypt files as you were uploading them and live-decrypt as you were downloading them)
Using those functions along with http://code.google.com/p/v8/ you should be able to interpret any javascript.
Not unless you know someone who's implemented a Javascript engine in PHP.
In other words, probably not.
Without some sort of browser emulation or passing the unparsed js off to a server side implementation of javascript (maybe node.js?), you won't be able to execute it.
However, does the page use the same js function to unscramble the phone number every time? You should be able to read the incorrect digits and shuffle them with PHP.
If you're prepared to do a bit of work building your own JS runtime to work with it, Tim Whitlock has written a javascript tokenizer and parser in pure PHP
node.js is server-side... but full JS :) no PHP in it so I don't it answer your needs...
Anyway, here is an example : a chat in JS both client & server-side : http://chat.nodejs.org/
Plus, not every host allows you to use the v8 engine...
If you have Javascript data objects, and you need to convert them to/from PHP arrays, that's quite easy using PHP's json_encode() and json_decode() functions.
But actually running Javascript code? No. You can't. You might be able to find a JS interpreter written in PHP (a few other answers have pointed a links that may or may not help you here), or more likely execute the JS using a stand-alone JS interpreter on your server which you call out to from PHP. However if the JS code includes references to the browser's DOM (which is highly likely), that's a whole other set of issues which will almost certainly make it impossible.
Given the way you describe the question, I'd say the easiest solution for you would just be to re-implement the JS code as PHP code; it's unlikely that all the work arounds being suggested would be appropriate for what sounds like a fairly simple bit of utility code.
I want to change my HTML page as an image. Is there a way in PHP to change or save an HTML page as an image?
This is not easy; as NullUserException says in his comment, you would need to render the HTML page on the server-side, which is not something PHP (or any other server-sided language) has built in.
The approach that comes to mind would be to write a program (probably not in PHP, but rather something like C# or C++) that runs on your server, fires up a web browser, and does a series of screen captures (possibly combined with page scrolls). As this is a very nontrivial and bug-prone process, I would suggest looking into third-party components that are capable of doing this.
You would then execute this program from PHP, and when it's done running, display the results from the file it output.
I would advise you to use an external service with an api. This list might be a good start: http://blogs.sitepoint.com/2008/07/10/9-ways-to-put-site-screenshots-in-your-web-app/
Thumbalizr seems great, they allso provide a php script so you can cache the images locally:
http://www.thumbalizr.com/apitools.php
Try taking a look at browsershots.org - source code is available for it if you want to install it locally. Essentially it uses a browser to take screenshots, and can be controlled via an XML-RPC interface, which you can call from PHP.
As others have said this is not a simple job, and not something you can do directly in PHP, so use an external service.
(I'm not affiliated with browsershots.org in any way)