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On Aug 24, 2007, at 11:22:14, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Fri, 2007-08-24 at 11:08 -0400, Steve Francisco wrote:
Hi, as an experiment I have a simple Java based server that
listens on
port 80 and can serve files just fine. I'd like to extend it to
On 8/24/07, Steve Francisco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip!]
> Thanks Daniel, I can certainly do that in Java without much trouble,
> however I was hoping to avoid needing to do things in each php file to
> convert argv into $_GET. I want to be able to serve standard PHP
> without modifying each
Daniel Brown wrote:
On 8/24/07, Steve Francisco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip!]
If the command line doesn't have a way to cause $_GET to be populated,
then what other way of invoking PHP could I use?
-- Steve
Steve,
You'd need to transpose the $_GET variables from the request to
$a
On 8/24/07, Steve Francisco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip!]
> If the command line doesn't have a way to cause $_GET to be populated,
> then what other way of invoking PHP could I use?
> -- Steve
Steve,
You'd need to transpose the $_GET variables from the request to
$argv variables via
On 8/24/07, Robert Cummings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Fri, 2007-08-24 at 11:08 -0400, Steve Francisco wrote:
> > Hi, as an experiment I have a simple Java based server that listens on
> > port 80 and can serve files just fine. I'd like to extend it to support
> > PHP but am looking for gui
On Fri, 2007-08-24 at 11:08 -0400, Steve Francisco wrote:
> Hi, as an experiment I have a simple Java based server that listens on
> port 80 and can serve files just fine. I'd like to extend it to support
> PHP but am looking for guidance on how to do that. Can someone point me
> to instructio