Fiddle, hadn't thought that out. Seeing as it's a non starter for shared 
hosting, then yes, it should probably be left to the web server to decide.

--
James Butler
Sent from my iPhone

On 18 Dec 2010, at 17:21, "Reindl Harald" <h.rei...@thelounge.net> wrote:

> They can not configure php too or the webserver allows
> this for virtuals hosts (IIS afaik does) but on
> shared hosting this had to be done from the admin
> 
> I agree that php is the wrong place
> 
> If any compnent have to say "405 Method Not Allowed"
> it is the webserver long before starting the interpreter
> 
> Am 18.12.2010 18:08, schrieb James Butler:
>> What about people on shared hosting?
>> 
>> --
>> James Butler
>> Sent from my iPhone
>> 
>> On 18 Dec 2010, at 17:07, "Daniel Convissor" 
>> <dani...@analysisandsolutions.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi Pierre:
>>> 
>>> On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 01:32:15PM +0100, Pierre Joye wrote:
>>> 
>>>> However I would
>>>> prefer to bring back a proposal we had a couple of years ago, to
>>>> totally disable post data.
>>> 
>>> Completely disabling POST is something that is probably best done
>>> via web server configurations.  Doing this at the
>>> applicaiton/programming layer seems like a kludge.
>>> 
>>> --Dan
>>> 
>>> -- 
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