Submitted by: PHP code exchange To get this file, in the web-browser, save this file as 'Text' type as pgsql_largeobj.lib
PX: PHP Code Exchange - <url name="PostgreSQL" url="http://www.geocities.com/alavoor/HOWTO/pgsql/PostgreSQL-HOWTO.html"> large object access <? $database = pg_Connect ( "", "", "", "", "jacarta"); pg_exec ($database, "BEGIN"); $oid = pg_locreate ($database); echo ( "$oid\n"); $handle = pg_loopen ($database, $oid, "w"); echo ( "$handle\n"); pg_lowrite ($handle, "foo"); pg_loclose ($handle); pg_exec ($database, "COMMIT"); pg_close ($database); ?>
To get this file, in the web-browser, save this file as 'Text' type as user_pw.lib
From the PHP 3 Manual: Works only if PHP is an Apache module. Instead of simply printing out the $PHP_AUTH_USER and $PHP_AUTH_PW, you would probably want to check the username and password for validity. Perhaps by sending a query to a database, or by looking up the user in a dbm file.
<?php if (!$PHP_AUTH_USER) { Header("WWW-authenticate: basic realm=\"My Realm\""); Header("HTTP/1.0 401 Unauthorized"); echo "Text to send if user hits Cancel button\n"; exit; } else { echo "Hello $PHP_AUTH_USER.<P>"; echo "You entered $PHP_AUTH_PW as your password.<P>"; } ?>
To get this file, in the web-browser, save this file as 'Text' type as network.lib
PHP: network adminstrator's best friend from http://www.phpWizard.net
As a web-developer, you're probably used to such lovely tools as ping, whois, nslookup etc. But what when you need one of those utilities at a client's office and have no access to telnet? Good guess. Time to look up the functions in the "Network" section of the PHP manual.
Socket operations:
The most important function there is fsockopen(). Using this function, you can connect to any open port on a server and establish a socket connection with it. The function's syntax is as following:
int fsockopen(string hostname, int port, int [errno], string [errstr]);
So, you could use this function to open a connection to a webserver and print out the headers:
function get_headers($host, $path = "/") { $fp = fsockopen ("$host", 80, &$errnr, &$errstr) or die("$errno: $errstr"); fputs($fp,"GET $path HTTP/1.0\n\n"); while (!$end) { $line = fgets($fp, 2048); if (trim($line) == "") $end = true; else echo $line; } fclose($fp); }
Finger: Naturally, you can also open connections to other ports. Writing a small finger client with PHP is trivial therefore. Let's change the example from above to query a finger daemon:
function finger ($host, $user) { $fp = fsockopen($host, 79, &$errno, &$errstr) or die("$errno: $errstr"); fputs($fp, "$user\n"); while (!feof($fp)) echo fgets($fp, 128); fclose($fp); }
Whois: Querying a whois server uses the same concept:
// domain is like "phpwizard.net" function whois($domain, $server="whois.internic.net") { $fp = fsockopen ($server, 43, &$errnr, &$errstr) or die("$errno: $errstr"); fputs($fp, "$domain\n"); while (!feof($fp)) echo fgets($fp, 2048); fclose($fp); }
Blocking and non-blocking operations: But there's a problem with all those functions. They work fine if
$fp = fsockopen($host, 79, &$errno, &$errstr) or die("$errno: [ ] $errstr"); set_socket_blocking($fp, 0); fputs($fp, "$user\n"); $stop = time() + $timeout; while (!feof($fp) && time() < $stop ) echo fgets($fp, 128); fclose($fp);