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I am trying to generate a 404 header, and I want the browser to display the browser default page for the error, but no matter what I have tried I always end up displaying an "empty" html document which is not what I want.
This is my code:
if (strlen($buffer) == 0)
{
ob_clean();
header('HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found');
ob_flush();
die();
}
Can anybody help?
There is no "browser default" 404 page. The 4xx or 5xx error pages are generated on the server. You could possibly look at e.g. Apache's default 404 page for reference.
Why don't you use http_response_code(404); instead?
There are no such thing. Quoting from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_404
The web site hosting server will typically generate a "404 Not Found"
web page when a user attempts to follow a broken or dead link
That said, as #Petter mentioned, most webservers have a default 404 page if you don't provide a custom one.
Trigger a 404 header:
header("HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found");
Kill the rest of the script:
die();
Just triggering the 404 header will not will the browser, but die will
if (strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')) {
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
}
Why wont this work? I get a blank page.
Your code is technically correct. If you looked at the headers of that blank page, you'd see a 404 header, and other computers/programs would be able to correctly identify the response as file not found.
Of course, your users are still SOL. Normally, 404s are handled by the web server.
User: Hey, do you have anything for me at this URI webserver?
Webserver: No, I don't, 404! Here's a page to display for 404s.
The problem is, once the web server starts processing the PHP page, it's already passed the point where it would handle a 404
User: Hey, do you have anything for me at this URI webserver?
Webserver: Yes, I do, it's a PHP page. It'll tell you what the response code is
PHP: Hey, OMG 404!!!!!!!
Webserver: Well crap, the 404 page people have already gone home, so I'll just send along whatever PHP gave me
In addition to providing a 404 header, PHP is now responsible for outputting the actual 404 page.
if (strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')){
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
echo "<h1>404 Not Found</h1>";
echo "The page that you have requested could not be found.";
exit();
}
If you look at the last two echo lines, that's where you'll see the content. You can customize it however you want.
That is correct behaviour, it's up to you to create the contents for the 404 page.
The 404 header is used by spiders and download-managers to determine if the file exists.
(A page with a 404 header won't be indexed by google or other search-engines)
Normal users however don't look at http-headers and use the page as a normal page.
For the record, this is the all-case handler:
<?php
header($_SERVER["SERVER_PROTOCOL"]." 404 Not Found");
header("Status: 404 Not Found");
$_SERVER['REDIRECT_STATUS'] = 404;
?> <!-- 404 contents below this line -->
Load default server 404 page, if you have one, e.g. defined for apache:
if(strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')){
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
readfile('404missing.html');
exit();
}
Since php 5.4 you can now do http_response_code(404);
Another solution, based on #Kitet's.
header($_SERVER["SERVER_PROTOCOL"]." 404 Not Found");
header("Status: 404 Not Found");
$_SERVER['REDIRECT_STATUS'] = 404;
//If you don't know which web page is in use, use any page that doesn't exists
$handle = curl_init('http://'. $_SERVER["HTTP_HOST"] .'/404missing.html');
curl_exec($handle);
If you are programming a website that hosted in a server you do not have control, you will not know which file is the "404missing.html". However you can still do this.
In this way, you provided exactly the same outcome of a normal 404 page on the same server. An observer will not be able to distinguish between an existing PHP page returns 404 and a non-existing page.
try with:
header("Status: 404 Not Found");
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
Bye!
A little bit shorter version. Suppress odd echo.
if (strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')){
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
exit("<h1>404 Not Found</h1>\nThe page that you have requested could not be found.");
}
if($_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] == '/index.php'){
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
echo "<h1>404 Not Found</h1>";
echo "The page that you have requested could not be found.";
die;
}
never simplify the echo statements, and never forget the semi colon like above, also why run a substr on the page, we can easily just run php_self
If you want the server’s default error page to be displayed, you have to handle this in the server.
You're doing it right though it could use some refining. Looks like that's been addressed so let's talk practical application benefits:
An old website of ours that has a large collection of multilingual tech docs was executing this inside an if else conditional:
if (<no file found>){
die("NO FILE HERE");
}
The problem (besides the unhelpful message and bad user experience) being that we generally use a link crawler (in our case integrity) to check out bad links and missing documents. This means that we were getting a perfectly correct 200 no error response telling us that there was a file there. Integrity didn't know that we were expecting a PDF so we had to manually add a 404 header with php. By adding your code above the die (because nothing afterwards would execute and header should always be before any rendered html anyway), integrity (which behaves more or less like a browser) would return a 404 and we would know exactly where to look for missing files. There are more elegant ways of telling the user that there is an error, but by serving a 404 error you are not only notifying browsers and browser-like programs of the error but (I believe-correct me if I'm wrong) are also recording those errors in your server logs where you can easily grep for 404s.
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
die("NO FILE HERE");
Try this:
if (strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')) {
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
echo "<head><title>404 Not Found</title></head>";
echo "<h1>Not Found</h1>";
$uri = rtrim(dirname($_SERVER['PHP_SELF']), '/\\');
echo "<p>The requested URL ".$uri." was not found on this server.</p>";
exit();
}
You know, in my website i created something like this:
$uri=$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];
$strpos=strpos($uri, '.php');
if ($strpos!==false){
$e404="The page requested by you: "".$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']."", doesn't exists on this server.";
$maybe=str_replace('.php','',$uri);
$maybe=str_replace('/','',$maybe);
die("<center><h1>404</h1><hr><h3>$e404</h3><h3>Maybe try <a href=$maybe>www.leaveyortexthere.p.ht/$maybe</a>?</center>");
}
i hope it helps you.
I came up to this problem.. I think that redirecting to a non existing link on your server might do the trick ! Because the server would return his 404:
header('Redirect abbb.404.nonexist'); < that doesnt exist for sure
If you want to show the server’s default 404 page, you can load it in a frame like this:
echo '<iframe src="/something-bogus" width="100%" height="100%" frameBorder="0" border="0" scrolling="no"></iframe>';
I have a dynamic review system in place that displays 30 reviews per page, and upon reaching 30 reviews it is paginated. So I have pages such as
/reviews/city/Boston/
/reviews/city/Boston/Page/2/
/reviews/city/Boston/Page/3/
and so on and so forth
Unfortunately, Google seems to be indexing pages through what seems like inference - such as
/reviews/city/Boston/Page/65/
This page absolutely does not exist, and I would like to inform Google of that. Currently it displays a review page but with no reviews. I can't imagine this being very good for SEO. So, what I am trying to do if first check the # of results from my MySQL query, and if there are no results return a 404 and forward them to the home page or another page.
Currently, this is what I have.
if (!$validRevQuery) {
header("HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found");
header("Location: /index.php");
exit;
}
Am I on the right track?
You need to output the 404 status, and show a response body (= an error page) at the same time.
if (!$validRevQuery) {
http_response_code(404);
// output full HTML right here, like include '404.html'; or whatever
exit;
}
Note that you cannot use a redirect here. A redirect is a status code just as the 404 is. You can't have two status codes.
You cannot do both send a 404 status code and do a redirection (usually 3xx status code). You can only do one of them: Either send a 404 status code and an error document or respond with a redirection.
As Pekka suggests, the best option is to do a 404 status, and then put your 404 page code after that.
It is bad practice for SEO if you just 301 (redirect) the page because then the search engines will continue to visit the page in order to see if the redirect is still there.
I have a php web page that now uses custom error pages when a page is not found. The custom error pages are included in PHP.
So when somebody types in an URL that does not exists I just include an error page, and the error page starts with:
<?php header("HTTP/1.1 404 Not> Found"); ?>
This also tells crawlers that the page does not exist.
Now I have set up a new system. When a user types a wrong url, the user is sent back to the frontpage and a message is displayed on the frontpage. I redirect to the frontpage like this:
header('Location:' . __TINY_URL . '/');
Now the problem is PHP just sends back a 200 code, page found.
How can I mix these two to create a 404 code on the frontpage.
And is this overall a nice way of presenting and error page.
It's giving you a 200 code because you are redirecting to a page that returns a 200 code. The way ive done this before is to send the 404 header then load the 404 view.
header("HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found");
include("four_o_four.php");
Redirecting after an error is not a very good idea. It's especially annoying for people who like to type in/edit URLs, because if you make a typo, you'll get redirected to some arbitrary page and have to start over.
I suggest you don't do this at all. If you want to, you can have your error page look like your front page though, albeit I think that'd be somewhat confusing.
You can add this into your htaccess
ErrorDocument 404 http://www.yourdomain.com/404.php
or
ErrorDocument 404 http://www.yourdomain.com/index.php #Your homepage
This will send the intials 404 header
if (strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')) {
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
}
Why wont this work? I get a blank page.
Your code is technically correct. If you looked at the headers of that blank page, you'd see a 404 header, and other computers/programs would be able to correctly identify the response as file not found.
Of course, your users are still SOL. Normally, 404s are handled by the web server.
User: Hey, do you have anything for me at this URI webserver?
Webserver: No, I don't, 404! Here's a page to display for 404s.
The problem is, once the web server starts processing the PHP page, it's already passed the point where it would handle a 404
User: Hey, do you have anything for me at this URI webserver?
Webserver: Yes, I do, it's a PHP page. It'll tell you what the response code is
PHP: Hey, OMG 404!!!!!!!
Webserver: Well crap, the 404 page people have already gone home, so I'll just send along whatever PHP gave me
In addition to providing a 404 header, PHP is now responsible for outputting the actual 404 page.
if (strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')){
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
echo "<h1>404 Not Found</h1>";
echo "The page that you have requested could not be found.";
exit();
}
If you look at the last two echo lines, that's where you'll see the content. You can customize it however you want.
That is correct behaviour, it's up to you to create the contents for the 404 page.
The 404 header is used by spiders and download-managers to determine if the file exists.
(A page with a 404 header won't be indexed by google or other search-engines)
Normal users however don't look at http-headers and use the page as a normal page.
For the record, this is the all-case handler:
<?php
header($_SERVER["SERVER_PROTOCOL"]." 404 Not Found");
header("Status: 404 Not Found");
$_SERVER['REDIRECT_STATUS'] = 404;
?> <!-- 404 contents below this line -->
Load default server 404 page, if you have one, e.g. defined for apache:
if(strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')){
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
readfile('404missing.html');
exit();
}
Since php 5.4 you can now do http_response_code(404);
Another solution, based on #Kitet's.
header($_SERVER["SERVER_PROTOCOL"]." 404 Not Found");
header("Status: 404 Not Found");
$_SERVER['REDIRECT_STATUS'] = 404;
//If you don't know which web page is in use, use any page that doesn't exists
$handle = curl_init('http://'. $_SERVER["HTTP_HOST"] .'/404missing.html');
curl_exec($handle);
If you are programming a website that hosted in a server you do not have control, you will not know which file is the "404missing.html". However you can still do this.
In this way, you provided exactly the same outcome of a normal 404 page on the same server. An observer will not be able to distinguish between an existing PHP page returns 404 and a non-existing page.
try with:
header("Status: 404 Not Found");
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
Bye!
A little bit shorter version. Suppress odd echo.
if (strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')){
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
exit("<h1>404 Not Found</h1>\nThe page that you have requested could not be found.");
}
if($_SERVER['PHP_SELF'] == '/index.php'){
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
echo "<h1>404 Not Found</h1>";
echo "The page that you have requested could not be found.";
die;
}
never simplify the echo statements, and never forget the semi colon like above, also why run a substr on the page, we can easily just run php_self
If you want the server’s default error page to be displayed, you have to handle this in the server.
You're doing it right though it could use some refining. Looks like that's been addressed so let's talk practical application benefits:
An old website of ours that has a large collection of multilingual tech docs was executing this inside an if else conditional:
if (<no file found>){
die("NO FILE HERE");
}
The problem (besides the unhelpful message and bad user experience) being that we generally use a link crawler (in our case integrity) to check out bad links and missing documents. This means that we were getting a perfectly correct 200 no error response telling us that there was a file there. Integrity didn't know that we were expecting a PDF so we had to manually add a 404 header with php. By adding your code above the die (because nothing afterwards would execute and header should always be before any rendered html anyway), integrity (which behaves more or less like a browser) would return a 404 and we would know exactly where to look for missing files. There are more elegant ways of telling the user that there is an error, but by serving a 404 error you are not only notifying browsers and browser-like programs of the error but (I believe-correct me if I'm wrong) are also recording those errors in your server logs where you can easily grep for 404s.
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
die("NO FILE HERE");
Try this:
if (strstr($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'],'index.php')) {
header('HTTP/1.0 404 Not Found');
echo "<head><title>404 Not Found</title></head>";
echo "<h1>Not Found</h1>";
$uri = rtrim(dirname($_SERVER['PHP_SELF']), '/\\');
echo "<p>The requested URL ".$uri." was not found on this server.</p>";
exit();
}
You know, in my website i created something like this:
$uri=$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];
$strpos=strpos($uri, '.php');
if ($strpos!==false){
$e404="The page requested by you: "".$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']."", doesn't exists on this server.";
$maybe=str_replace('.php','',$uri);
$maybe=str_replace('/','',$maybe);
die("<center><h1>404</h1><hr><h3>$e404</h3><h3>Maybe try <a href=$maybe>www.leaveyortexthere.p.ht/$maybe</a>?</center>");
}
i hope it helps you.
I came up to this problem.. I think that redirecting to a non existing link on your server might do the trick ! Because the server would return his 404:
header('Redirect abbb.404.nonexist'); < that doesnt exist for sure
If you want to show the server’s default 404 page, you can load it in a frame like this:
echo '<iframe src="/something-bogus" width="100%" height="100%" frameBorder="0" border="0" scrolling="no"></iframe>';