Would it be possible for you to regulate with which user are allowed to
access which file? In such a case, if a user can't do fopen() on a
certain php file, then this user wont be able to access the
functionality in this file. A Q&D solution as to say.

Anyhow, in my I ignorant view of what you have done, it might be
an idea to review the design strategy of your project.

On Wed, 2004-02-25 at 15:43, Paul Menard wrote:
> Okay, well first I do not wish to complicate the maintenance of the system by 
> requiring dual
> setup, once on the windows user level and another in the database to adjust the user 
> group
> membership. And no I do not want to add a fancy form page that will allow me to do 
> this task. At
> this point I have over 600 accounts on the system. The requirements were to use 
> system-level user
> authentication not a database. So I would have to build a table to contain the 
> accounts and keep
> this sync'd with the adding/deleting of users which is a separate part of the system 
> that I have
> no control over. 
> 
> But thanks for the suggestion.
> 
> FPM
> 
> 
> --- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > Have an entry in your MySQL databases that states a/the users level (admin, user 
> > etc). Then when
> > they attempt to login check against this value against their username/password 
> > credentials and
> > then determine the logic yourself.
> > 
> > You could even have a dropdown box populate with the types of admin/user etc and 
> > then compare
> > this value with the username/password in the database etc
> > 
> > Its not to difficult, you just need to think about it.
> > 
> > Tryst
> > 
> > -- 
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> > 

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