Yes, that could be the solution. Atleast as this only a temporary (I
really, really hope so) way of doing this.
Thank you.
Kenneth
I guess you could have wordpress set a cookie of some sort if they
have access, and then use that cookie in web2py to control access.
On Thursday, February 7,
I guess you could have wordpress set a cookie of some sort if they have
access, and then use that cookie in web2py to control access.
On Thursday, February 7, 2013 11:13:41 AM UTC-7, Kenneth wrote:
>
> Hi Michael,
>
> Am I understanding you solution completly wrong but isn't it so that
> web2py
Am Donnerstag, 7. Februar 2013 19:13:41 UTC+1 schrieb Kenneth:
>
> Am I understanding you solution completly wrong but isn't it so that
> web2py asks WP if a username and password compination is OK. In my case
> customer first logs into a WP site, he gets a list of manuals he has paid
> for.
Hi Michael,
Am I understanding you solution completly wrong but isn't it so that
web2py asks WP if a username and password compination is OK. In my case
customer first logs into a WP site, he gets a list of manuals he has
paid for. When selecting a manual he wants to read he is sent to a
web2
Hello Kenneth,
> But how do I handle that WP takes care of authentication and somehow gives
> the customer rights to view the manual.
>
>
I had a similar problem. I added an XMLRPC method to my wordpress instance
to check if a given username/password combination is valid and added an
auth me
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