in sapi_send_headers()
# Looks like a similar problem in sapi/pi3web/pi3web_sapi.c as well.
# I can't test this though, so I'm being paranoid and not changing that code.
# Could someone please check this?
SAPI and down into the individual SAPI modules. I have made the
appropriate changes in all the SAPI modules, but please verify these.
The reason for this change is that Apache sometimes will feed PHP
a request_method of GET but have r->header_only set to true. This happens
in an ErrorDocument redirect. In this same scenario we want to preserve
the status code as well instead of just overwriting it with a 200 and
losing this information. For now the other sapi modules act exactly as
before since they probably do not make this distinction, and they may
not even have a valid response code this early in the request.
@ Fix HEAD request bug on an Apache ErrorDocument redirect and preserve
@ the status code across the redirect as well. (Rasmus)
long-requested functionality, now that output buffering is re-entrant:
function eval_ret($code)
{
ob_start();
eval($code);
$retval = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
return $retval;
}
plus a little cleanup and rearranging in command line option parsing
@ CGI aka. command line version has now an option '-l' for syntax check
@ without execution (Hartmut)
Setting ini_path after php_module_startup doesn't do much good -
since php_module_startup reads .ini.
# This fix is very ugly. Everyone is welcome to make better fix
# that won't report errors twice and won't scan argument 3 times
authenticated used id will get logged in the Apache access_log
@- When using HTTP auth from PHP, fill in the %u custom log field so the
@ authenticated used id will get logged in the Apache access_log (Rasmus)
Draft 3 of IEEE 1003.1 200x, "2.2 The Compilation Environment"
All identifiers that begin with an underscore and either an uppercase
letter or another underscore are always reserved for any use by the
implementation.
header. ApacheBench is an example. PHP's HTTP Auth would not work with
these.
Some user-agents send 'basic' instead of 'Basic' in their Authorization
header. ApacheBench is an example. PHP's HTTP Auth would not work with
these. (Rasmus)