Edit report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=47494&edit=1
ID: 47494 Updated by: ras...@php.net Reported by: philipp dot feigl at gmail dot com Summary: htmlspecialchars does not throw E_WARNING on multibyte problems Status: Not a bug Type: Feature/Change Request Package: Strings related Operating System: CentOS5 PHP Version: 5.2.8 Block user comment: N Private report: N New Comment: user at dudmail dot com you seem confused. A properly configured server doesn't have display_errors on in production so I don't see how it is leaking in that case. And as was pointed out, this code has been revamped in 5.4 to give you a number of options of what to do with invalid chars which means there is no need for the warning anymore. Previous Comments: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-10-19 06:11:33] user at dudmail dot com Not showing with display_errors = 1 to avoid leaks on badly configured servers, while showing and thus leaking sensitive information with properly configured servers? This is lame. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-09-13 18:53:41] lzsiga at freemail dot c3 dot hu It would be a valid reason, if there were any plan to support utf16/32, as iso-8859-x and utf-8 are ASCII-compatible. But even then, the default value for the $encoding parameter still could be 'ascii(or compatible)'. Or, like some other string operations, there could be a mb_htmlspecialchars function. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-09-13 17:25:08] ras...@php.net By simple I assume you mean an htmlspecialchars() function that doesn't check the validity of the characters. The problem is that we have to do that. We can't encode characters without understanding which charset we are dealing with and we need to make sure that the character we are looking at is a valid one. The world has moved beyond 7-bit ASCII, sorry. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-09-13 17:07:47] lzsiga at freemail dot c3 dot hu If the name of the function were 'check_for_multibyte_validity_and_htmlspecialchars' then you'd be right, but even then I'd lobby for a simple 'htmlspecialchars' function... Doing something (ie multibyte validity check) that the user (the PHP-programmer in this case) didn't specifically ask doesn't seem to me to be a good idea (see magic_quotes for another example). PS: Of course I wouldn't complaining (or even know about the whole question) if the default value hadn't been changed to 'UTF-8' in 5.4. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [2012-09-06 15:33:13] ras...@php.net Also note that many, if not most, apps use this as their only validity filter and if you output invalid UTF-8, for example, it can lead to security problems like the well-known IE 0xE0 XSS exploit. So at some point along the line you have to do a multi-byte check and it may as well be here since we need to do it anyway. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The remainder of the comments for this report are too long. To view the rest of the comments, please view the bug report online at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=47494 -- Edit this bug report at https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=47494&edit=1