Jason Wong wrote:
On Wednesday 09 February 2005 02:31, Richard Lynch wrote:
Phil Ewington - 43 Plc wrote:
For some reason user_prefs will not open
for read/write even when I tested it under apache.apache and chmod'd
to 755,
perhaps because /home is owned by root?
Something
Jason Wong wrote:
On Wednesday 09 February 2005 02:31, Richard Lynch wrote:
Phil Ewington - 43 Plc wrote:
For some reason user_prefs will not open
for read/write even when I tested it under apache.apache and chmod'd
to 755,
perhaps because /home is owned by root?
Something went
Hi All,
I am revisiting a previous question posted here as after lots of
investigation and code testing I cannot get what I want.
I want to use PHP to read/write files that are outside of the web root and
not owned by apache. To be specific...
$HOME/.procmailrc
$HOME/.spamassassin/user_prefs
On Tuesday 08 February 2005 20:50, Phil Ewington - 43 Plc wrote:
So my question is can I easily/safely edit files outside of the web
root using PHP or is there a 3rd party command line tool to do this?
Your real question is: can I easily/safely edit files that [the user
running] PHP has no
Phil Ewington - 43 Plc wrote:
Hi All,
I am revisiting a previous question posted here as after lots of
investigation and code testing I cannot get what I want.
I want to use PHP to read/write files that are outside of the web root and
not owned by apache. To be specific...
$HOME/.procmailrc
On Tue, 8 Feb 2005 12:50:59 -, Phil Ewington - 43 Plc
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So my question is can I easily/safely edit files outside of the web root
using PHP or is there a 3rd party command line tool to do this?
sudo can assist you with this task.
--
Greg Donald
Zend Certified
Phil Ewington - 43 Plc wrote:
For some reason user_prefs will not open
for read/write even when I tested it under apache.apache and chmod'd to
755,
perhaps because /home is owned by root?
Something went wrong with this test.
You SHOULD have been able to read/write that file in PHP, assuming
On Wednesday 09 February 2005 02:31, Richard Lynch wrote:
Phil Ewington - 43 Plc wrote:
For some reason user_prefs will not open
for read/write even when I tested it under apache.apache and chmod'd
to 755,
perhaps because /home is owned by root?
Something went wrong with this test.
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