greetings
Would you tell us how to create a script to read these files, extract their
contents and create temporary PNG/JPG/GIF files on the fly ??
in this case we can (as u said) store the pictures content in the mysql and
output them when we like
Regards


<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hi Philip,
>
> On 10 Jan 2004 at 12:42, Philip J. Newman wrote:
>
> > I want to store some images outside the /public_html/ how ever my isp
> > has decided that i'm not aloud to write files in that area.  Would the
> > next best solution that wold be as secure to maybe put them in a folder
> > with a .htaccess file in it?
>
> You could use an htaccess file, but: (a) the Apache web server must be
configured to
> allow htaccess to over-ride authentication settings (which, from what
you've told us, is
> something you'll have no control over); (b) you'd need to upload an
htpasswd file
> containing username and passwords pairs to the webserver, but wouldn't be
able to
> save it to an off-web directory; and (c) the htaccess file would prevent
your own scripts
> from accessing the image files, which would mean that the user viewing a
page with a
> protected image would need to type a username and password in order for
the image to
> be displayed. Doesn't sound like the best solution to me.
>
> Do you have access to a database? One solution would be to store all
images on a
> database and have the image files generated dinamically via PHP. That
would imply in
> some overhead, but it would be fairly secure. If you like the idea, let me
know and I'll tell
> you how I've implemented it in the past.
>
> Another much more complicated solution would be to rename your image files
with a
> PHP extension (thus protecting their contents) and create a script to read
these files,
> extract their contents and create temporary PNG/JPG/GIF files on the fly.
>
> Good luck,
>
> Erik

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