Thank you,

But I have try too use that new line on my php.ini file but I still can't
get it to work out. I use Win Xp Pro with IIS 5.1

I've done a reset to the server & restarted windows too. but still it shows
the some msg error.


Rob


"Numero 6" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Roberto Valverde), il 04 mag 2002, trasse
> un profondo sospiro e disse:
>
> > Hi all,
> >
> > please I need help, the Message error is:
> >
> > Security Alert! PHP CGI cannot be accessed directly.
> > This PHP CGI binary was compiled with force-cgi-redirect enabled. This
> > means that a page will only be served up if the REDIRECT_STATUS CGI
> > variable is set. This variable is set, for example, by Apache's Action
> > directive redirect.
> >
> > You may disable this restriction by recompiling the PHP binary with
> > the --disable-force-cgi-redirect switch. If you do this and you have
> > your PHP CGI binary accessible somewhere in your web tree, people will
> > be able to circumvent .htaccess security by loading files through the
> > PHP parser. A good way around this is to define doc_root in your
> > php.ini file to something other than your top-level DOCUMENT_ROOT.
> > This way you can separate the part of your web space which uses PHP
> > from the normal part using .htaccess security. If you do not have any
> > .htaccess restrictions anywhere on your site you can leave doc_root
> > undefined. If you are running IIS, you may safely set
> > cgi.force_redirect=0 in php.ini.
>
> You have to add a new key in php.ini: cgi.force_redirect = 0
> (if you're running IIS or PWS, either Win98 or NT)



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