In my website I want to save the MD5 of the user's IP in a cookie named "utm". How can I check, using htaccess, if the MD5 of the real user's IP %{REMOTE_ADDR} is exactly the one in the cookie? I want something like this:
RewriteCond %{HTTP_COOKIE}:MD5(%{REMOTE_ADDR}) ^.*utm=([^;]*).*:(?!\1).*$
...
@ircmaxell theoretically. Each packet being correct individually doesn't equate the whole download to be correct (especially in conjunction with something like pause/resume, which really loves to corrupt downloads...)
they are theoretically possible. In that the mathematics are there. But nobody has ever found a single collision, yet a way to generate them. yet a way to modify a valid message into a new one with the same hash
I have no problem about the user seeing the cookie because I use this htaccess only to prevent ddos attack on my pages that have a huge CPU usage. I demand that if the user wants to open those pages he/she must have a cookie setted. This was my first approach. After that I required that the cookie must be set but with the IP. And to make it even more ddos proof I want to save the cookie using the MD5 so I can check it back in the server. I already use Blockdos in my shared server but I want to add this extra layer which works perfectly except the MD5 which would make it amazing! — Samul1 min ago
@NikiC unless they are within the "band of negativity". Too poor, and it will get upvotes as people won't understand why it's bad. But too realistic, and it will get upvotes by people who don't know any better
I don't have the energy for an rfc, but, I don't see any logical reason not to have a debugging platform included ... or at least, one that cannot be contained ... xdebug is fine where it is, this doesn't work outside of /sapi folder ...
@DanLugg Some brief googling leads me to believe this is in reference to some person named "rebecca black". I am unfamiliar with whatever it is you're referring to
anyone have an idea why <form action="/en/profile" method="post"> redirects me to home on submit, while regularly visiting domain/en/profile does redirect me to the correct page? I'm using routing, and the form action url should be correct
the same routing structure in the action of a form on another page does work fine
ffs Anyone else have trouble convincing themselves of something sometimes? I'm writing something that performs file-comparison; as a last resort it compares the contents. I keep thinking that MD5 will somehow be faster, but it's not precomputed, so the whole file has to be read either way.
My Brain, a dialogue: Left-side: Use MD5! Right-side: No, the whole file has to be rea-- Left-side: MD5! MD5! MD5! Hash everything! Right-side: You've been smoking hash, haven't you...
I have two objects of the same class. I want to know which of their attributes are not identical (I need the attribute keys, not values). What's the clean way to find this out?
Imagine you have a Person class, its attributes are fname, lname and dob. I have two Person objects, I want to find out which of their attributes are different.
@SweetieBelle Well, as a method to the class, you'd have access to private properties, so get_object_vars will work fine; then it's just an array comparison.
@NikiC right now, it will always run memcmp if they are not the same memory address. But you could short-circuit since you know the lengths are different, and hence avoid the comparison all together
but if you short it for comparison it wouldn't be a lexicographical sort anymore
in theoretical informatics we called the length-first one "standard order" (as it's friendlier for isomorphism bijections...), not sure what's the proper term for it
Since views are not supposed to know about the HTTP request and views ask the model for data what is the best way to deal with a simple get request which contains a product ID? The request comes in, the controller extracts the ID, does the view have a setProductId($id) method so the controller can set the ID and then the view can use that when getting the product data? Seems the only way to do it to me
@David "The request comes in, the controller extracts the ID," That sounds at least partly dumb - I would have thought that the routing layer would be the thing that is analysing the request and pulling variables out of it, for the other components to use.
@Danack Shouldn't the requested controller action/method extract the required data from the request, then pass whatever data was extract into some method of a service like signup(......) or login(......) or whatever needs to be done
@David I don't think so. Why should a controller even know how it was called, or know anything about how to extract data from a URL? It should just be called with just the info it needs to know about to do it's piece of business logic.
@Danack In a login controller for example in my method I would do $username = $this->request->post('username'); $this->request->post('password'); then pass that data into a service which deals with login
@David I never said they should. I also don't think controllers should know about requests - as I said, I extract all the parameters from the request out at the routing layer, and then inject them as needed into the controller. And the same for the view.
So rather than calling call_user_func_array( array($controller, $route->getMethod()), $route->getParams()); with the all the params passed in, it looks a lot more like:
@Danack What about for a huge registration form would you have your controller method have 15 or 20+ parameters and then one of your services having a register() method with the exact same 15 or 20+ parameters?
@David Despite Ben getting the wrong end of the stick again, This "call_user_func_array( array($controller, $route->getMethod()), $route->getParams());" is not what I do.
@Danack How do you handle all the data without getting lost in it and inconsistencies? I could not imagine dealing with lots of data without domain objects to manage it in a structured way
@David "How do you handle all the data without getting lost in it and inconsistencies?" By being able to inject the data validation rules when you go to save something in the DB, rather than having them hard coded in a model.
e.g.from my last project, when an end-user signed up for the service they had to provide a valid email address and mobile phone number. When a sales guy created a demo account to present to a client (and give them the login details at the end of the meeting), they didn't need to provide either an email address or phone number.
So there is a set of rules for end users creating accounts, and a set of rules for sales guys creating accounts. Those sets of rules are defined separately and get applied as appropriate. But they're not really part of a 'model'.
@Danack Should data validation be encapsulated as much as possible in domain objects though? I can remove any specific validation rule for a property or I can remove them all by doing:
@PeeHaa The worst part of all, is that, FileInfo.FullName returns the fully qualified path. Path.GetFullPath() returns the fully qualified path. They don't use the same code. At all.
@David That's certainly a valid way of doing it. You just asked how I avoid having unmanageable data without a 'fat' model; I'm not saying that mine is the One True Way - it's just what works for me.
@PeeHaa Serious though, it's so damn frustrating; I don't know whether I should use one or the other, and I'm definitely skeptical about using both, in the event they each handle edge cases differently.
@David Also, I'm not following a strict MVC pattern - you could argue that my routing layer is acting as the 'Controller' in my application (i.e. deciding what code to call and then what View to display), and what is in my 'Controller' directory is actually a 'Service layer'. But they're really just names, and not really important.
@ircmaxell What about if you ask the model layer for the last 10 registered users in array format and all the values of type string need to be escaped/secured for the template
@ircmaxell and then you do the same except this time you get 100 orders. If you don't use references and recursive function you would have to do all the escaping manually wouldn't you?
It's yet again time once again to again yet support your favorite open source project through our Free Vote-Based Advertising for Open Source Projects. We are clearing the leaderboards to start the second half of 2013.
Here is your chance to create a Free Vote-Based Advertisement for an Open Sou...
Me neither like at all, but c'mon you get the opportunity to be blocked by thousands and thousands of users. At least do something fancy or get somebody to do it for you