I said AFAIK. I was under the impression the DirectoryIndex did a
redirect. I just tested it and it does not, so you are correct Jochem.
He has everything he needs. He'll need the document root and
$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] to do this.
Thank you,
Micah Gersten
onShore Networks
Internal Developer
Micah Gersten schreef:
What is the point of figuring that out? If we knew that, we might be
able to help you with a solution. As it stands what you want is not
possible AFAIK.
you know wrong. he has all the info needed.
1. the document root of the site (/var/www/example.com)
2. the requeste
I am pretty certain that this isnt possible under current code. But i
just wanted a confirmation on this, since i worked on the code for a
while trying to get to the end point. And yes Jochem, i am looking for
a magical location :P
Well, thanks guys :)
Ólafur Waage
2008/8/24 Micah Gersten <[EMAI
What is the point of figuring that out? If we knew that, we might be
able to help you with a solution. As it stands what you want is not
possible AFAIK.
Thank you,
Micah Gersten
onShore Networks
Internal Developer
http://www.onshore.com
Ólafur Waage wrote:
> I am within a certain directory o
Ólafur Waage schreef:
Robert, thanks for the reply but i had tried __FILE__ and __DIR__
(which is dirname(__FILE__)) but it doesnt work.
__DIR__ only came into existence very recently IIRC,
realpath(dirname(__FILE__)); will tell you what directory the
*current script* is actually living in ...
Thanks for this David, i was using REQUEST_URI and other $_SERVER info
and mixed that together. It worked in some situations but on hosted
servers (like GoDaddy and others like that where they use a
complicated directory setup) it does not work.
Olafur Waage
2008/8/23 David Otton <[EMAIL PROTECTE
2008/8/23 Ólafur Waage <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Robert, thanks for the reply but i had tried __FILE__ and __DIR__
> (which is dirname(__FILE__)) but it doesnt work.
>
> And thanks for the reply also Ashley but as i said in my first post, i
> had tried $_SERVER with limited results
If checking the o
Luke, i am looking for local directory info. Not URL info as i said before.
And Ashley, as i said in the original mail. I had tried $_SERVER.
Thanks for the reply though.
Ólafur Waage
2008/8/23 Luke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> $_REQUEST?
>
> Luke Slater
> Lead Developer
> NuVoo
>
> On 23 Aug 2008, at
Robert, thanks for the reply but i had tried __FILE__ and __DIR__
(which is dirname(__FILE__)) but it doesnt work.
And thanks for the reply also Ashley but as i said in my first post, i
had tried $_SERVER with limited results
Ólafur Waage
2008/8/23 Robert Cummings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Fri,
On Fri, 2008-08-22 at 22:13 -0400, Eric Butera wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 8:50 PM, Ólafur Waage <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'll throw out an example here.
> >
> > I have a directory structure of: /var/www/example/
> > And in that i have a file: index.php
> > That file echo's getcwd() and
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 8:50 PM, Ólafur Waage <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'll throw out an example here.
>
> I have a directory structure of: /var/www/example/
> And in that i have a file: index.php
> That file echo's getcwd() and returns: /var/www/example/
>
> Now i tell Apache or Lighty that if
I am within a certain directory of the server via the browser.
Example:
http://www.example.com/foo/bar
would be
/var/www/example.com/foo/bar
And Apache's DirectoryIndex feature is opening a index.php file that
is located at
/var/www/example.com/test/index.php
And from that file i need to figure
On Fri, 2008-08-22 at 21:56 +, Ólafur Waage wrote:
> That is the brick wall i faced. There is no way to know where exactly
> you are (via DirectoryIndex) locally on the machine.
>
> Thanks though.
>
> 2008/8/22 Micah Gersten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > You might want to try a Redirect Rule or re
That is the brick wall i faced. There is no way to know where exactly
you are (via DirectoryIndex) locally on the machine.
Thanks though.
2008/8/22 Micah Gersten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> You might want to try a Redirect Rule or rewrite which would tell you
> the HTTP PATH. AFAIK, there is no way t
You might want to try a Redirect Rule or rewrite which would tell you
the HTTP PATH. AFAIK, there is no way to know which directory they
tried to access unless you write your own index.php and store it in a
session variable.
Thank you,
Micah Gersten
onShore Networks
Internal Developer
http://www.
Thanks for the reply Micah but i have no interest in the URL. I am
looking for the servers local path to the directory. (example:
/var/www/directory/ or C:\apache\htdocs\directory\)
Also the HTTP_REFERER is empty unless you are linked in from another
location. And then it gives you the URL you came
How are you browsing to it from within PHP? Depending on how you are
doing it, the way to get the cwd is different
Ash
www.ashleysheridan.co.uk
--- Begin Message ---
I'll throw out an example here.
I have a directory structure of: /var/www/example/
And in that i have a file: index.php
That file e
Once you tell apache to load /example/index.php, that's where you are.
You might try looking at the $_SERVER['HTTP_REFERER'].
Thank you,
Micah Gersten
onShore Networks
Internal Developer
http://www.onshore.com
Ólafur Waage wrote:
> I'll throw out an example here.
>
> I have a directory structu
I'll throw out an example here.
I have a directory structure of: /var/www/example/
And in that i have a file: index.php
That file echo's getcwd() and returns: /var/www/example/
Now i tell Apache or Lighty that if a directory does not have an
index.php file, that it should use /example/index.php (
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