On 01/04/2012 12:46 PM, Johannes Schlüter wrote: > On Wed, 2012-01-04 at 12:29 -0800, Stas Malyshev wrote: >> Hi! >> >>> But there is a very valid security concern here. People can usually run >>> safely with display_errors enabled if their code is well-written. They >> >> Oh no. Nobody should or can safely run production with display_errors. >> Everybody thinks their code is well-written, but display_errors should >> never be enabled in production, however high is your opinion of the code. >> I'm afraid people now will start quoting this saying "ok, yeah, if >> you're a bad programmer, disable display_errors, but I'm a good >> programmer, my code is solid, I even have a dozen of unit tests, so I >> just go ahead and enable display_errors" and then we have this sad state >> of affairs where sites spill out error messages that are never supposed >> to be seen by clients because developers thought it can never happen. > > On shared hosts display_errors typically is on, but the application can > do ini_set('display_errors', 0) or such ...
But that is precisely why this is a special case. Even if you do ini_set('display_errors', 0) in your code this message will still be displayed. Although, display_startup_errors is off by default and hopefully this one falls under that setting. I didn't test it, but if it doesn't then we need to make sure it is suppressed when display_startup_errors is off. -Rasmus -- PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php