Thanks, that should do.

On May 20, 8:09 pm, Ray Baxter <ray.bax...@gmail.com> wrote:
> So, you are running it from a server.
>
> The problem is that your server is incorrectly reporting the host.
> Your host is "localhost" but your server is reporting it as
> "localhost:8888".
>
> If you fix your server configuration, then the getCurrentUrl will
> return the correct value.
>
> Ray
>
> On Wed, May 20, 2009 at 11:55 AM, mhausenblas
>
> <michael.hausenb...@deri.org> wrote:
>
> > Ray,
>
> >> The Calendar.php script is designed for running from the command line.
>
> > I don't think so. If you look at the code (line 28-30), it clearly
> > says:
>
> > "* You can run this sample both from the command line (CLI) and also
> >  * from a web browser.  When running through a web browser, only
> >  * AuthSub and outputting a list of calendars is demonstrated."
>
> > further lines 662-663 say:
>
> > "* Main logic for running this sample code via the command line or,
> >  * for AuthSub functionality only, via a web browser."
>
> > and also the lines 839-840:
>
> > " // running through web server - demonstrate AuthSub
> >  processPageLoad();"
>
> > I think I also clearly pointed out where the bug is, but I'm happy
> > telling you again ;)
>
> > The bug is in the "function getCurrentUrl()"  as "return $protocol .
> > $host . $port . $php_request_uri;" falsely returns the port
> > duplicated.
>
> > Your help is appreciated.
>
> > Cheers,
> > Michael
>
> > On May 17, 10:25 pm, Ray Baxter <ray.bax...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> What exactly are you trying to do? The Calendar.php script is designed
> >> for running from the command line. The value of the host and port come
> >> from environment variables:
>
> >>  $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] = value of the Host: header
> >>  $_SERVER['SERVER_PORT']
>
> >> which you shouldn't need to set, but if you do, you aren't supposed to
> >> include the port in the host.
>
> >> Ray
>
> >> On Sun, May 17, 2009 at 5:23 A
>
> >> M, mhausenblas <michael.hausenb...@deri.org> wrote:
>
> >> > Just tried out GData/PHP/Zend API, the 'Calendar.php' example on MacOS
> >> > using MAMP and had an issue with it. I got an error like
>
> >> > The "next" parameter was bad or missing."
>
> >> > Ok, so I'm digging into it and found a bug in 'Calendar.php':
>
> >> > the getCurrentUrl() function returnshttp://localhost:8888:8888/yadayada
> >> > rather thanhttp://localhost:8888/yadayadadueto $host having the
> >> > port information already in it and it is hence duplicated.
>
> >> > If someone from the PHP team reads this, please fix it.
>
> >> > Cheers,
> >> > Michael
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