I'm working on an application that includes e-mail notifications of
certain events. Because the application will have hundreds or thousands
of users, I've designed it so that e-mail notifications are saved to a
MySQL table. Then a regular cron job runs a php page to select the data
from the
Jeffrey wrote:
I'm working on an application that includes e-mail notifications of
certain events. Because the application will have hundreds or
thousands of users, I've designed it so that e-mail notifications are
saved to a MySQL table. Then a regular cron job runs a php page to
select the
Nathan Nobbe wrote:
umm, so whats going on here is the implicit component of the statement
that incorporates relative or absolute performance. in terms of
relative performance the statement is accurate; in terms of absolute
performance, its quite inaccurate.
Nathan, I think we're
On Sunday 20 April 2008 11:27:38 Jeffrey wrote:
I'm working on an application that includes e-mail notifications of
certain events. Because the application will have hundreds or thousands
of users, I've designed it so that e-mail notifications are saved to a
MySQL table. Then a regular cron
Per Jessen wrote:
Jeffrey wrote:
I'm working on an application that includes e-mail notifications of
certain events. Because the application will have hundreds or
thousands of users, I've designed it so that e-mail notifications are
saved to a MySQL table. Then a regular cron job runs a php
Jeffrey wrote:
Per Jessen wrote:
Jeffrey wrote:
I'm working on an application that includes e-mail notifications of
certain events. Because the application will have hundreds or
thousands of users, I've designed it so that e-mail notifications
are saved to a MySQL table. Then a regular
Børge Holen wrote:
Is the MTA operational on the server? if so, forget
mailing with php and rather use php to access the mta.
Yeah, that is what mail() does - it calls sendmail.
/Per Jessen, Zürich
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I'm getting from an external source a PNG image in raw format (encoded in
base64).
And with this code I'll echo on the screen.
--
$img=base64_decode($_POST['img']);
header(Content-type: image/png);
echo $img;
--
How can I check if the data received is a real PNG raw (and not
On Sun, 2008-04-20 at 15:52 +0200, rb wrote:
I'm getting from an external source a PNG image in raw format (encoded in
base64).
And with this code I'll echo on the screen.
--
$img=base64_decode($_POST['img']);
header(Content-type: image/png);
echo $img;
--
A quick way would
On Sun, 2008-04-20 at 15:52 +0200, rb wrote:
I'm getting from an external source a PNG image in raw format (encoded in
base64).
And with this code I'll echo on the screen.
--
$img=base64_decode($_POST['img']);
header(Content-type: image/png);
echo $img;
--
A quick way would be to
On 4/19/2008 2:37 PM, Jason Norwood-Young [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Might be obvious but you are doing mysql_query($sql);, right?
Hello Jason,
Thanks - Your idea worked well - for a while - but then I ran into
trouble...
I added : mysql_error() and it said:
Table 'connect2.ztest' doesn't
On 4/20/08, revDAVE [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 4/19/2008 2:37 PM, Jason Norwood-Young [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Might be obvious but you are doing mysql_query($sql);, right?
Hello Jason,
Thanks - Your idea worked well - for a while - but then I ran into
trouble...
I added :
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 6:50 AM, Per Jessen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nathan Nobbe wrote:
umm, so whats going on here is the implicit component of the statement
that incorporates relative or absolute performance. in terms of
relative performance the statement is accurate; in terms of
On Sunday 20 April 2008, Jeffrey wrote:
I'm working on an application that includes e-mail notifications of
certain events. Because the application will have hundreds or thousands
of users, I've designed it so that e-mail notifications are saved to a
MySQL table. Then a regular cron job runs a
On Sun, 2008-04-20 at 14:17 -0400, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 6:50 AM, Per Jessen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nathan Nobbe wrote:
umm, so whats going on here is the implicit component of the statement
that incorporates relative or absolute performance. in terms of
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 2:34 PM, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On Sun, 2008-04-20 at 14:17 -0400, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 6:50 AM, Per Jessen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nathan Nobbe wrote:
umm, so whats going on here is the implicit component of the
I have my login.php file that when I access the login fields they are in
a small window width=400,height=250. When I click on submit I what it to
close this window and open another full window with the web page that
the script directs it to. But nomater what I do it opens it in the same
window
On Sun, 2008-04-20 at 14:41 -0400, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 2:34 PM, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On Sun, 2008-04-20 at 14:17 -0400, Nathan Nobbe wrote:
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 6:50 AM, Per Jessen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Nathan Nobbe wrote:
I don't believe malicious code can be executed with echo and header.
The header of the PNG file, not a HTTP header.
--
Richard Heyes
++
| Access SSH with a Windows mapped drive |
|http://www.phpguru.org/sftpdrive|
I mean, if you already specified it as a PNG image with header(), how
do you execute Javascript/malicious code, as the browser will render
it as a PNG?
Malicious code can still be embedded in images. The vulnerabilities ISTR
are in Windows image handling libraries. I assume they've been fixed
On Sun, 2008-04-20 at 13:32 -0500, Larry Garfield wrote:
On Sunday 20 April 2008, Jeffrey wrote:
I'm working on an application that includes e-mail notifications of
certain events. Because the application will have hundreds or thousands
of users, I've designed it so that e-mail
On Sunday 20 April 2008 13:37:04 Per Jessen wrote:
Børge Holen wrote:
Is the MTA operational on the server? if so, forget
mailing with php and rather use php to access the mta.
Yeah, that is what mail() does - it calls sendmail.
/Per Jessen, Zürich
What the point of 50 mails now and
Hello,
with the following call I try to print a string out of DB
echo $allg-translate($db, $lang, 14, auth/authCallback, 4);
function translate () should do a DB querry and returns the requested
string. Although the querry yields a positive result, the function returns
no value.
Here is
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 4:51 PM, Ali Reza Sajedi [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Hello,
with the following call I try to print a string out of DB
echo $allg-translate($db, $lang, 14, auth/authCallback, 4);
function translate () should do a DB querry and returns the requested
string. Although the
Can't really know without the rest of the code.
Check if the function really returns and not Dying (Add some messege like:
die(help me I'm dying); ).
Also use print_r or something like to see what's inside the fields array.
it is possible that it's an associative array and you are using the
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