Tijnema wrote:
On 6/19/07, Jim Lucas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Dan wrote:
> I wish I could, I can't count on the script being on a linux machine. I
> also can't expect people to rebuild PHP with the curl library just to
> use my script. Is there any other way to do a post to a page from a php
> function?
>
> - Daniel
>
> "Jim Lucas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Dan wrote:
>>> I would normaly do it with an AJAX call but I need to do a post from
>>> WITHIN a PHP function, so when it's doing php stuff
>>> ex.
>>> function something()
>>> {
>>> echo 'whatever';
>>> $response = post some data to a ISAPI Extension eg. post to
>>> http://domain.com/scripts/app.dll
>>> return $response . "other data";
>>> }
>>>
>>>
>>> ""Jay Blanchard"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
>>> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>> [snip]
>>> I'm in need of a way to contact an ISAPI Extension from a PHP function. >>> Does anyone know how I would be able to do this? Usually you would post
>>> a
>>> page to their URL/actionname.  Can I do a POST from a PHP function
>>> without
>>> reloading the page, and get a result back?  That's one tall order.
>>> Anyone
>>> want to give it a shot?
>>> [/snip]
>>>
>>> Do the POST with an AJAX call
>>
>> perform an ajax call the a php script that calls curl to do a post to
>> the ISAPI extension
>>
>> --
>> Jim Lucas
>>
>>    "Some men are born to greatness, some achieve greatness,
>>        and some have greatness thrust upon them."
>>
>> Twelfth Night, Act II, Scene V
>>     by William Shakespeare
>
The only method that I am aware of is the fsockopen method you mention in your other email

--
Jim Lucas

Yes, and what's wrong with it?

where did I infer that their was something wrong with the fsockopen method?

<?php
$post_data = "form_a=1&form_b=4";
$fp = fsockopen("www.domain.com",80);
fwrite($fp,"POST /scripts/app.dll HTTP/1.1\r\nHost:
www.domain.com\r\nContent-Length:
".strlen($post_data)."\r\n\r\n".$post_data);
$result = fread($fp,102400); // Reads 100KB, change if you need more
?>

That's not too long is it?

Tijnema



--
Jim Lucas

   "Some men are born to greatness, some achieve greatness,
       and some have greatness thrust upon them."

Twelfth Night, Act II, Scene V
    by William Shakespeare

--
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