Thanks for the link. Everything there makes sense, and I'm not sure if I need to turn register_globals on to make this work. Is there a way to get either:
$_SERVER["PATH_TRANSLATED"] Or $HTTP_SERVER_VARS["SCRIPT_FILENAME"] (perhaps??) Without turning register_globals on? Oh, and I am doing this from within a class. I'm guessing I could do it outside of the class and pass it into the constructor, but I'd prefer to just get it inside the constructor if possible... Essentially I am just trying to find out from whereon the filesystem the script is being called initially. Thanks for the patience and help. Wes > http://www.php.net/manual/en/security.registerglobals.php > > On Wed, 15 May 2002, Weston Houghton wrote: > >> >> Ok, makes sense based on previous threads I have gleaned over. Can you point >> me to any reading material that fills in the details on all of this though? >> Would like to know more about why I am doing this, and if I should change my >> coding based on how PHP is progressing. >> >> Thanks! >> Wes >> >> >>> Turn on register_globals in your php.ini file and things should start >>> working again. >>> >>> On Tue, 14 May 2002, Weston Houghton wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> All, >>>> >>>> I've recently upgraded from 4.1.2 to 4.2.0. And of course my script has >>>> stopped working. I know a lot with the globals has changed, but to be >>>> honest, I am not sure how or why. Can anyone give me an initial lead as to >>>> what I should look for first? >>>> >>>> I know I use the following elements: >>>> >>>> $_SERVER["PATH_TRANSLATED"] >>>> $PHP_SELF >>>> >>>> I can't believe it is $PHP_SELF. What should I be wary of when using PHP >>>> Environment vars like: $_SERVER["PATH_TRANSLATED"] >>>> -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php