AuthWare Friendly Urls & Bug List

Language – PHP

Friendly Urls

Why did I suddenly decide to create friendly Urls for AuthWare. I must tell the truth – I never really intended to. There was a stage at which I wanted to restructure it to utilise Apaches mod_rewrite.

I’ve always had this thing for not comprehending regular expressions. In fact I hardly ever use them except for my html to xhtml converter (I think the function is called html_2_xhtml()).

The only stuff this function hasn’t been able to do is exclude specific tags. I’m a very stubborn coder – which means I don’t look at others’ work until I’m convinced I’m stumped – or until I come up with mine.

Speaking of mod_rewrite, I realised it would never work out – I have both IIS and Apache on my machine and I’ve configured both to run PHP. There are some users that use Windows out there and there was no way I could see them being excluded from using my system – because IIS obviously doesn’t support rewriting except you use some third-party tool. I then remembered trying to browse some web pages and adding slashes at the end – just some idleness on my part. Was there a way to get it out? Yes, I discovered – by using $_SERVER['PATH_INFO']. I converted the ampersands (&) to slashes as well as the “?“. I created an array $temp_array by splitting – using explode().

I then created a new blank array – let’s call it $_get. For every even index x in $temp_array, I looped through $temp_array, adding an array member to $_get with key $temp_array[x] and value $temp_array[x+1]. Then I array_merge()d $_get and $_GET.

Bug List

After using that method, I discovered that my sessions were being set wrongly whenever I turned friendly urls on. The PHPSESSID was being set wrongly. No secure information is stored in the sessions – just the current page so that AuthWare remembers the last page you were viewing when you log out. For example, for index.php/mode/cat/action/viewsub/id/1, the cookie path is index.php/mode/cat/action/viewsub/id/1 which isn’t what I had in mind. I guess I have two options

  • Save everything in a MySQL database but that just increases traffic or
  • Find some way of extracting the real path of the script and then setting a cookie each time.

Linux Issues

Linux servers have a different way of interpreting $_SERVER[‘PATH_INFO’] as I found out after uploading and running phpinfo() when my friendly urls wouldn’t work. I had to insert a check and strip $_SERVER["SCRIPT_NAME"] from $_SERVER["REQUEST_URI"]. It’s currently running as expected.