php-general Digest 12 Dec 2007 13:59:28 - Issue 5177
Topics (messages 265728 through 265749):
Re: running cmd via php
265728 by: Chris
265731 by: Jochem Maas
265732 by: Chris
265733 by: Jochem Maas
265734 by: Stephen Johnson
265735 by: Chris
Hello there,
We have a large project with lots of classes.
Now i am wondering if there is a way to let something check all those
files and tell me which methods/functions variables/constants etc..
arn't used anymore.
Or even which files arn't used anymore.
Is there already something like
Jochem Maas wrote:
Have you tried stracing it to see what's really happening when the
load goes that high?
am I correct that that would be done like so?:
strace -p process id of php deamon
Yep, that's it. You'll probably want to record the output for analysis,
but sometimes it's very
Robert Cummings wrote:
I can't remember what sort of environment the OP was in, but if any
sort of organised testing is done, the use of two different APIs will
just about double the test-effort. Which is why I still think the
best option is to mandate _one_ of the APIs and choose your
On Wed, 12 Dec 2007 10:21:58 +0100, Mathijs van Veluw
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello there,
We have a large project with lots of classes.
Now i am wondering if there is a way to let something check all those
files and tell me which methods/functions variables/constants etc..
arn't used
On Wed, 12 Dec 2007 10:21:58 +0100, Mathijs van Veluw
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello there,
We have a large project with lots of classes.
Now i am wondering if there is a way to let something check all those
files and tell me which methods/functions variables/constants etc..
arn't used
At 2:22 PM -0600 12/10/07, Jay Blanchard wrote:
Without order there cannot be randomness.
Without randomness, you wouldn't know what order was.
This is one of those yin-yang things.
There is simply order and randomness existing in our minds. There is
no order, nor randomness, existing in
tedd wrote:
At 5:15 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
Just for fun, I decided to write out an algorithm to randomize
with a never-known seed that would update constantly, with no human or
external script intervention required to initiate or maintain it.
My guess is that if there
At 2:46 PM -0500 12/10/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Mon, 2007-12-10 at 11:37 -0800, Stephen Johnson wrote:
True randomization is only really possible in nature.
Can you say for certain nature is truly random? Just because the seed
may have occurred 13.7 billion years ago and we don't know
At 2:32 PM -0500 12/10/07, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
Random numbers with Gauss distribution (normal distribution).
A correct alghoritm. Without aproximations, like Smaaps'
It is specially usefull for simulations in physics.
Check yourself, and have a fun.
-snip-
JanS
student of astronomy
on Warsaw
At 5:36 PM -0500 12/8/07, Steve Finkelstein wrote:
Hey folks,
One area I lack experience in is writting a solution to index/search on a
site. Would anyone be kind enough and point me in the right direction as far
as any books which discuss some simple solutions or articles/blogs on the
web?
At 5:15 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
Just for fun, I decided to write out an algorithm to randomize
with a never-known seed that would update constantly, with no human or
external script intervention required to initiate or maintain it.
My guess is that if there was a time that
At 2:04 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
?php
if( strlen( $pw1 ) 6
||
!ereg( '[[:digit:]]', $pw1 )
||
strlen( ereg_replace( '[^[:alpha:]]', '', $pw1 ) ) 2
||
strlen( ereg_replace( '[[:alnum:][:space:]]', '', $pw1 ) ) 1 )
{
// error message
}
?
Cheers,
At 3:04 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Dec 10, 2007 2:28 PM, AmirBehzad Eslami [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
For some computer-based simulation, i need to
generate random numbers that have a normal distribution.
[snip!]
Unfortunately, because computers are logical, there's no such
On Dec 12, 2007 9:00 AM, tedd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 3:04 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
Unfortunately, because computers are logical, there's no such
thing (at least as of yet) as a truly random number being generated by
a machine.
Unless the computer is tied to a
On Dec 11, 2007 9:20 PM, Stephen Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Google : php exexcute windows commands
You can even hit the I'm feeling lucky button. ;)
I was actually going to say the exact same thing. ;-P
--
Daniel P. Brown
[Phone Numbers Go Here!]
[They're Hidden From View!]
If at
On Dec 12, 2007 4:47 AM, Per Jessen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Robert Cummings wrote:
I can't remember what sort of environment the OP was in, but if any
sort of organised testing is done, the use of two different APIs will
just about double the test-effort. Which is why I still think the
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 10:47 +0100, Per Jessen wrote:
Robert Cummings wrote:
I can't remember what sort of environment the OP was in, but if any
sort of organised testing is done, the use of two different APIs will
just about double the test-effort. Which is why I still think the
best
That's right. I'm running IIS 7 not IIS 6. I was to fast reading the
version 6 in the about box.
I found out I needed to setup the IIS 7 with ISAPImodule specially. I found
that out by expanding the IIS7-setup-option-tree to the bottom. They at
Microsoft are very clever to hide this, ASP vs. PHP
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:00 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 3:04 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Dec 10, 2007 2:28 PM, AmirBehzad Eslami [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
For some computer-based simulation, i need to
generate random numbers that have a normal distribution.
[snip!]
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:00 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 2:22 PM -0600 12/10/07, Jay Blanchard wrote:
Without order there cannot be randomness.
Without randomness, you wouldn't know what order was.
You're random with disorder.
This is one of those yin-yang things.
Not really :)
There is
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:15 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 2:46 PM -0500 12/10/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Mon, 2007-12-10 at 11:37 -0800, Stephen Johnson wrote:
True randomization is only really possible in nature.
Can you say for certain nature is truly random? Just because the seed
may have
On 12/12/2007, Daniel Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Dec 12, 2007 9:00 AM, tedd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 3:04 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
Unfortunately, because computers are logical, there's no such
thing (at least as of yet) as a truly random number being generated
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 08:59 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 5:15 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
Just for fun, I decided to write out an algorithm to randomize
with a never-known seed that would update constantly, with no human or
external script intervention required to initiate or maintain
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 10:15 -0500, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:00 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 2:22 PM -0600 12/10/07, Jay Blanchard wrote:
Without order there cannot be randomness.
Without randomness, you wouldn't know what order was.
You're random with disorder.
[snip]
But maybe Tedd is also a bit random and disorderly ;)
[/snip]
Maybe?
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On Dec 12, 2007 10:53 AM, Robin Vickery [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can you define for me where the machine stops and nature starts?
I mean, if I make a clock that uses the physical properties of a
pendulum to demarcate units of time then the pendulum is obviously
part of the machine.
But if I
On Dec 12, 2007 11:04 AM, Jay Blanchard [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
But maybe Tedd is also a bit random and disorderly ;)
[/snip]
Maybe?
In Tedd's defense, there's a fine line between genius and
insanity, and he keeps getting closer and closer to that genius side.
;-P
I don't
Hey there,
I try to decode the subjects of an email with German umlaute (öäü ..),
which are encoded in in quoted printable.
For Example ... the string Gr=FC=DFen has to be converted to Grüßen.
I tried it with a little example and it worked fine:
?php
$test = imap_qprint(Gr=FC=DFen);
$handle =
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 11:16 -0500, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Dec 12, 2007 10:53 AM, Robin Vickery [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can you define for me where the machine stops and nature starts?
I mean, if I make a clock that uses the physical properties of a
pendulum to demarcate units of time
Robert Cummings wrote:
The universe is the machine... all sub machines are part of the greater
machine that is the universe.
heh, that makes me a browser. :-P
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nevermind, I see I had a mistake in my mysql statement, I should of been:
select DATE_FORMAT(testdate, '%m\-%d\-%Y') as date_column from testtable;
please disregard.
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I ran the commands:
CREATE TABLE testtable ( testdate DATETIME);
INSERT INTO testtable (testdate) VALUES (now());
and then I want to select it but format it to show the date only (not
the time, and yes I know I could use DATE instead of DATETIME, but there
may be cases where I need to show
On Dec 12, 2007 11:26 AM, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The universe is the machine... all sub machines are part of the greater
machine that is the universe.
As such, the deer is indeed part of the machine as are the decaying
isotopes that were probably formed in some process of
I'm working on hotel type booking script where prices will vary
depending on the season. prices are updated every year so i need to take
a user inputed date and determine which season the date falls under.
i figured i can convert all dates into a timestamp and then run a series
conditional
On Dec 12, 2007, at 11:31 AM, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Dec 12, 2007 11:26 AM, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
The universe is the machine... all sub machines are part of the
greater
machine that is the universe.
As such, the deer is indeed part of the machine as are the decaying
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 11:43 -0500, Jason Pruim wrote:
On Dec 12, 2007, at 11:31 AM, Daniel Brown wrote:
On Dec 12, 2007 11:26 AM, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
The universe is the machine... all sub machines are part of the
greater
machine that is the universe.
As
On Dec 12, 2007 11:39 AM, slith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm working on hotel type booking script where prices will vary
depending on the season. prices are updated every year so i need to take
a user inputed date and determine which season the date falls under.
i figured i can convert all
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 17:50 +0100, Jochem Maas wrote:
Robert Cummings wrote:
The universe is the machine... all sub machines are part of the greater
machine that is the universe.
heh, that makes me a browser. :-P
Not IE I hope :B
Cheers,
Rob.
--
I am trying to install php4-syck but there is no package for it on apt
repository on ubuntu. So I got the .deb package and did
#dpkg -i php4-syck.x.deb
it installed the package and I restarted the apache webserver and tried to
run syck_load() function. It throws me an error that the function is
At 3:13 PM +0100 12/12/07, Jochem Maas wrote:
tedd wrote:
At 5:15 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
Just for fun, I decided to write out an algorithm to randomize
with a never-known seed that would update constantly, with no human or
external script intervention required to
yes, i was trying to keep things simple and avoid using a database but i
think may go that route like you suggested.
Andrew Ballard wrote:
Will the boundary dates for each season change from one year to the
next? If so, I would probably store the seasons in a database table
and then just
Thanks Tedd... looks like a promising link. I'll take a look!
On 12/12/07, tedd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 5:36 PM -0500 12/8/07, Steve Finkelstein wrote:
Hey folks,
One area I lack experience in is writting a solution to index/search on a
site. Would anyone be kind enough and point me in
At 10:12 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 08:59 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 5:15 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
Just for fun, I decided to write out an algorithm to randomize
with a never-known seed that would update constantly, with no human or
external
Hello,
I'm trying to read some zlib-compressed data from a regular binary
file. When I try to attach the zlib compression filter, I am getting
an error: something about how the prebuffered data didn't work with
the filter and so the filter wasn't added to the filter chain.
I looked
At 11:43 AM -0500 12/12/07, Jason Pruim wrote:
*Gets ready to duck from all the non-deer eating people*
Drat!
There are lot's of things that are non-deer -- even ducks. But they
don't all eat people.
The world is getting out of whack again.
Cheers,
tedd
--
---
http://sperling.com
At 10:04 AM -0600 12/12/07, Jay Blanchard wrote:
[snip]
But maybe Tedd is also a bit random and disorderly ;)
[/snip]
Maybe?
Hey! I resemble that remark.
Cheers,
tedd
--
---
http://sperling.com http://ancientstones.com http://earthstones.com
--
PHP General Mailing List
At 11:00 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 10:15 -0500, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:00 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 2:22 PM -0600 12/10/07, Jay Blanchard wrote:
Without order there cannot be randomness.
Without randomness, you wouldn't know
At 10:18 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:15 -0500, tedd wrote:
You most certainly have a point there. Our identification,
classification, and definition of order is really what's at issue.
Order and randomness are simply our perceptions of the world around
At 10:17 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
In my ancient past I worked with a x-ray detector and we simply
truncated to the tens digit -- that was pretty random.
Random seeming you mean. As mentioned in the original post, just because
the timeline and sample space is immense
At 10:15 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:00 -0500, tedd wrote:
There is simply order and randomness existing in our minds. There is
no order, nor randomness, existing in nature, it's our perception,
clarification, and categorization of nature that demands
On Dec 12, 2007 1:16 PM, tedd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 10:17 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
In my ancient past I worked with a x-ray detector and we simply
truncated to the tens digit -- that was pretty random.
Random seeming you mean. As mentioned in the original post,
Hi,
We have long running daemons written in php ( cli, non-apache
contexts) with the typical pattern:
while( !$shutdown )
{
$c = new SomeClass;
$c-process();
}
For performance reasons, would it help if apc.enable_cli is turned on:
apc.enable_cli integer
Mostly for testing and
On Dec 12, 2007 2:33 PM, Ravi Menon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
We have long running daemons written in php ( cli, non-apache
contexts) with the typical pattern:
while( !$shutdown )
{
$c = new SomeClass;
$c-process();
}
For performance reasons, would it help if apc.enable_cli
On Wed, December 12, 2007 11:35 am, GoWtHaM NaRiSiPaLli wrote:
I am trying to install php4-syck but there is no package for it on apt
repository on ubuntu. So I got the .deb package and did
#dpkg -i php4-syck.x.deb
it installed the package and I restarted the apache webserver and
tried to
On Wed, December 12, 2007 1:33 pm, Ravi Menon wrote:
We have long running daemons written in php ( cli, non-apache
contexts) with the typical pattern:
while( !$shutdown )
{
$c = new SomeClass;
$c-process();
}
For performance reasons, would it help if apc.enable_cli is turned on:
I'm running php 5.2.5 with these settings in a virtualhost block in apache
2.0.61:
php_admin_flag safe_mode on
php_admin_value include_path /afs/msu.edu/.../web
php_admin_value safe_mode_include_dir /afs/msu.edu/.../web
I've got an index.php file in web/support/ that does
I'm running php 5.2.5 with these settings in a virtualhost block in
apache 2.0.61:
php_admin_flag safe_mode on
php_admin_value include_path /afs/msu.edu/.../web
php_admin_value safe_mode_include_dir /afs/msu.edu/.../web
I've got an index.php file in web/support/ that does a
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 12:40 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 10:12 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 08:59 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 5:15 PM -0500 12/10/07, Daniel Brown wrote:
Just for fun, I decided to write out an algorithm to randomize
with a never-known seed that
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 13:16 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 10:17 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
In my ancient past I worked with a x-ray detector and we simply
truncated to the tens digit -- that was pretty random.
Random seeming you mean. As mentioned in the original post, just
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 13:18 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 10:18 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:15 -0500, tedd wrote:
You most certainly have a point there. Our identification,
classification, and definition of order is really what's at issue.
Order and
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 13:21 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 11:00 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 10:15 -0500, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:00 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 2:22 PM -0600 12/10/07, Jay Blanchard wrote:
Without order there cannot be
On Wed, December 12, 2007 11:28 am, Bob Sabiston wrote:
I'm trying to read some zlib-compressed data from a regular binary
file. When I try to attach the zlib compression filter, I am getting
an error: something about how the prebuffered data didn't work with
the filter and so the filter
Tony,
Calm down. It may take us 21 minutes to respond sometimes, but we
will. No need to repost. ;-P
On Dec 12, 2007 3:26 PM, Tony Beyers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm running php 5.2.5 with these settings in a virtualhost block in
apache 2.0.61:
php_admin_flag safe_mode on
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 13:13 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 10:15 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 09:00 -0500, tedd wrote:
There is simply order and randomness existing in our minds. There is
no order, nor randomness, existing in nature, it's our perception,
On Dec 12, 2007, at 2:31 PM, Richard Lynch wrote:
On Wed, December 12, 2007 11:28 am, Bob Sabiston wrote:
I'm trying to read some zlib-compressed data from a regular binary
file. When I try to attach the zlib compression filter, I am getting
an error: something about how the prebuffered
At 1:33 PM -0500 12/12/07, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
On Dec 12, 2007 1:16 PM, tedd
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED][EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just because someone said it, doesn't mean it's true.
pfft; just because you dont believe it doenst mean its false.
Nope, but I find it difficult o believe.
I
At 3:36 PM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 13:18 -0500, tedd wrote:
My opinion is always the same regardless of how many times I change it.
Contradiction. Change implies not the same. I'm sure your tongue was in
your cheek though when you wrote it :)
Cheers,
Rob
At 3:42 PM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
Yes, but what if my disorder was random?
How could you prove it is random? Give me an example of something you
can put into disorder that doesn't use the premise of order? For
instance throwing a handful of sand into the air is expected to
At 3:35 PM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 13:16 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 10:17 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
In my ancient past I worked with a x-ray detector and we simply
truncated to the tens digit -- that was pretty random.
Random seeming
At 3:34 PM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 13:13 -0500, tedd wrote:
Just because we think, does not prove randomness, nor order, in
nature -- it only proves that we think about it.
Actually, order is proven. The fact that I can re-arrange objects into
an order
On Dec 12, 2007 3:42 PM, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How could you prove it is random? Give me an example of something you
can put into disorder that doesn't use the premise of order? For
instance throwing a handful of sand into the air is expected to obey the
establish laws of
Sorry about the double posting. I thought I sent the first email
before I was subscribed.
I definitely should've pointed out that the code works with safe_mode
off so I know the paths are correct.
I'm actually not the author of the code. I'm a sys admin trying to
upgrade the site with safe_mode
-Original Message-
From: Tony Beyers [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2007 5:55 PM
To: PHP General list
Subject: Re: [PHP] safe_mode_include_dir
Sorry about the double posting. I thought I sent the first email
before I was subscribed.
I definitely
-Original Message-
From: tedd [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2007 6:35 PM
To: PHP General list
Subject: RE: [PHP] Generating Random Numbers with Normal Distribution
At 3:42 PM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
Yes, but what if my disorder was
Hi gang:
Another mysql question.
I would like to create a temporary table to perform searches.
From my main table, I need to exclude records that have certain
fields that are null or empty; and then sort the final result.
I've spent over an hour looking at How do I set up a temporary table
Try gzuncompress();
On Dec 12, 2007, at 1:03 PM, Bob Sabiston [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On Dec 12, 2007, at 2:31 PM, Richard Lynch wrote:
On Wed, December 12, 2007 11:28 am, Bob Sabiston wrote:
I'm trying to read some zlib-compressed data from a regular binary
file. When I try to
tedd wrote:
Hi gang:
Another mysql question.
I would like to create a temporary table to perform searches.
From my main table, I need to exclude records that have certain fields
that are null or empty; and then sort the final result.
Should be possible without a temp table I think..
I've
Thanks for clarifying my doubts - the steps below sounds right to me.
I was just considering the overall perf. of such php daemons and
whether we can get some free perf. boost
with that apc setting.
Ravi
On Dec 12, 2007 12:19 PM, Richard Lynch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, December 12,
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 16:20 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 3:34 PM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 13:13 -0500, tedd wrote:
Just because we think, does not prove randomness, nor order, in
nature -- it only proves that we think about it.
Actually, order is proven.
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 16:21 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 3:35 PM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 13:16 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 10:17 AM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
In my ancient past I worked with a x-ray detector and we simply
truncated to the tens
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 16:34 -0500, tedd wrote:
At 3:42 PM -0500 12/12/07, Robert Cummings wrote:
Yes, but what if my disorder was random?
How could you prove it is random? Give me an example of something you
can put into disorder that doesn't use the premise of order? For
instance
OK, I've read every message on the list for the last year that contains
'sessions'. I've read through (bleary eyed, admittedly)
http://us2.php.net/session. And I swear, honest, that I had this working on
another box (which is no longer available to me.) I've checked phpinfo -
session support is
Read manual please.
http://us.php.net/session_save_path
On Dec 12, 2007 9:27 PM, Robert Erbaron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OK, I've read every message on the list for the last year that contains
'sessions'. I've read through (bleary eyed, admittedly)
http://us2.php.net/session. And I swear,
Robert Erbaron wrote:
OK, I've read every message on the list for the last year that contains
'sessions'. I've read through (bleary eyed, admittedly)
http://us2.php.net/session. And I swear, honest, that I had this working on
another box (which is no longer available to me.) I've checked phpinfo
Aw crap. :)
(session_save_path BEFORE session_start.)
Works fine now... now to clean the egg off face.
Thx,
On Dec 12, 2007 11:31 PM, Casey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Read manual please.
http://us.php.net/session_save_path
--
RE, Chicago
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