On Wed, 5 Jul 2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello all,
According to the PHP Manual, when require or require_once failes, an
E_ERROR is triggered: "require() and include() are identical in every way
except how they handle failure. include() produces a Warning while
require() results in a Fatal Error." (With 'Fatal Error' being a link to
E_ERROR).
Thing is, when using a custom error handler via set_error_handler(), it
appears to be triggering an E_WARNING, not an E_ERROR. Using PHP 5.1.4
under Linux.
There are one of three possibilities: I am suffering from a lapse in
lucidity (common), the manual is wrong (possible), or PHP is broken
somehow (unlikely). I'm guessing it's the first, but what am I doing
wrong? I'd like to get a second opinion before submitting a bug. I
searched bugs.php.net but was unable to find anything relevant for 5.1.4.
Code:
function default_error_handler($code, $error, $file, $line) {
switch ($code) {
case E_ERROR:
die ("Error: $error");
case E_WARNING:
die("Warning: $error");
default:
die("Something else entirely: $error");
}
}
What happens if you put breaks after the die()? This shouldn't be
necesary, but it wouldn't hurt to try. ;-)
As I see in the example of the PHP manual, a break is put even after an
exit(1) call.
set_error_handler('default_error_handler');
require('This file does not exist. At least not here!');
Have you tried this handler with something more fatal, like a missing
semi-colon or a } missmatch?
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Lic. Martín Marqués | SELECT 'mmarques' ||
Centro de Telemática | '@' || 'unl.edu.ar';
Universidad Nacional | DBA, Programador,
del Litoral | Administrador
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