Correct. Just to expand on that, a browser will not send the hash fragment
part of a URL with the request. If you ever receive that part at the web
server, that's a pretty good sign the request came from a robot.

Andrew
On Apr 21, 2013 3:29 AM, "Ashley Sheridan" <a...@ashleysheridan.co.uk> wrote:

>
>
> tamouse mailing lists <tamouse.li...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >On Sat, Apr 20, 2013 at 1:51 PM, Angela Barone
> ><ang...@italian-getaways.com> wrote:
> >>         I've written a script that logs all visits to a web site,
> >complete with referrer and IP address.  It also logs all 4xx errors.
> >What I'd like to add to this is, if someone adds extra code after the
> >page_name.php, to be able to capture any extra code and log that.
> >>
> >>         I've tried:
> >>
> >> $_SERVER['QUERY_STRING']
> >> $_SERVER['REDIRECT_QUERY_STRING']
> >> $_SERVER['REDIRECT_URL']
> >
> >So, since I wasn't exactly sure what got put into $_SERVER, and since
> >I'm lazy, I tapped out the following script:
> >
> ><?php
> >header("Content-type: text/plain");
> >echo '$_SERVER:'.PHP_EOL;
> >var_dump($_SERVER);
> >?>
> >
> >When I called it with the following URL:
> >
> >http://localhost/~tamara/teststuffout/logger.php/one/two?a=true#fragment
> >
> >It showed all the stuff in $_SERVER as a result of that, including:
> >
> > ["REQUEST_URI"]=>
> >  string(47) "/~tamara/teststuffout/logger.php/one/two?a=true"
> >
> >  ["PATH_INFO"]=>
> >  string(8) "/one/two"
> >
> >  ["QUERY_STRING"]=>
> >  string(6) "a=true"
> >
> >Interestingly, it appears nothing reports #fragment...
> >
> >--
> >PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
> >To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
>
> It wont, the fragment is always local. You'd need javascript to handle that
>
> Thanks,
> Ash
> http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk
>
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