Ernest E Vogelsinger wrote...
>> You could use eval(), but that didn't work for me since I had mixed
>> PHP/XHTML.
>
> Why wouldn't it work?
Your example worked wonderfully, but I wasn't able to make eval() work with
mixed PHP/XHTML content (which is what I'm creating).
-- Charles Wiltgen
--
on 12/11/02 1:45 AM, Peter VanDijck ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> But that's scary for the user (granting some company access to your
> server???).
Wouldn't they just be providing FTP access with a uname and pword to a
specific directory or group of directories?
Another idea:
If you have user ma
Peter VanDijck wrote...
>> Security issues will prevent you from reading or writing any files that
>> your PHP process doesn't have permissions for. In my experience, the only
>> reliable way to do this is by using FTP using the username and password that
>> the user will (presumably) give you.
>
> > Some ideas so far (that will probably betray my ignorance :): - updating
> > images will require write access that may introduce security issues?
>
> Security issues will prevent you from reading or writing any files that
> your PHP process doesn't have permissions for. In my experience, the
Peter VanDijck wrote...
> I want to write some (browser based) software that will get installed on the
> client's servers, and I want it to update automatically (as in Windows XP: new
> updates are downloaded and presented for install). Can that be done with PHP?
I've been considering something s
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