@DaveRandom after going to command line and restarting it, it told me it could not load the xdebug file (what xampp did not say). So I used phpinfo() in the xdebug.org/wizard.php and it gave me the correct file. Now I seem to have some data, so I guess it is working.
@DaveRandom trick question, no-one is good at sed.
Also, holy shit:
Immediate evacuation of Oroville, CA ordered due to potential flood: "This in NOT A Drill. This in NOT A Drill. Thiā¦ https://twitter.com/i/web/status/830945530389749761
Apparently that might have been a factor in the problems with the spillways at that dam. One theory is the soil has dried out so much is contracted away from the concrete underneath.
Does anyone know why the hell a file under VC would not be getting cloned when the rest of the repo is? A git status says the branch is up to date with origin, the server clones from origin but the file does not get copied to the server.
What I have in the /web is another file like app.php and app_dev.php. It is an app_alpha.php which allows me to load the site in an alpha environment like site.com/app_alpha.php/some-page etc. I think after a composer install Symfonys post scripts it runs re makes this /web dir and that's how my file gets deleted
Wow
I found it
Holy shit
Have you ever used the tool Deployer for deploying stuff? This is my first time
This is why you can never give an accurate estimation on a delivery time to a client. You can never foresee these things that end up taking hours and hours to solve only to find out it was a tiny thing.
This is a trusted enough tool I think. deployer.org Beside this problem I could deploy to the server and run all the task straight away
Sounds strange that your deployment tool likes to make such arbitrary decisions on your behalf. I can't imagine Ansible would wish to just arbitrarily delete files for me.
If I tell Ansible to deploy a repo, I don't expect it to also start modifying that repo on my behalf :)
The thing is I didn't have to use the pre define Symfony deployment tasks but I did. I can see why it did it because in a deployed Symfony app you usually should only have one web/app.php file which is the front controller and loads the application up in production environment. It is to make sure the app_dev.php file does not get deployed which allows you to load the application up in dev environment by going to site.com/app_dev.php/some-page
I don't know much about Symfony, but plenty of frameworks just make the environment configurable. I hate to use Laravel as an example for anything, but you can change the environment there, switching between dev and production, and use middleware to mediate based on environment configuration.
With Symfony on the CLI you can execute your command and supply the environment you want it to run in. If you want to load the application over HTTP in a different environment you just add a new /web/app_{env}.php file
If you keep a separate configuration repository anyway, which you should, you never have to worry about accidentally deploying development code to production or vice versa.
But lets say I have environments prod, dev, alpha, beta, test. When I send a HTTP request to site.com how do I load it up in a dev or test environment?
But then say I'm developing locally in a dev environment but need to run tests on the same machine. I need to run some functional tests on a HTTP API. How do I send requests to that API loading the test environment?
With Symfony I'd go to site.com/app_test.php/some/endpoint
You seem to be overthinking this. If the config says the environment should be dev, the code should operate under that assumption. If the config says the environment should be prod, the code should operate under that assumption. But to suggest that the user should operate differently based on the environment is just a silly onus to place on the user.
That seems more annoying to me. I like having my clear site.com/app_dev.php when I want to run in dev environment and site.com/app_test.php/ Now I never need to mess with config files when I want to load up a new environment over HTTP
You shouldn't have to mess with config files anyway if you're keeping the configs in a separate repo.
That way you only deploy the prod config to prod once and the dev config to dev once and you can continue updating both environment with the same code base without ever having to worry about changing configs.
The dev and test are a good example I think. When you are locally developing obviously the dev environment is what you will be in most of the time but you will also need to load it in a test environment to run tests which uses a different DB etc
@ibanore Not sure how test environment is different from dev environment, but the fact that you have a different environment probably means you should have a different VM for that.
@LeviMorrison Oh that sounds lovely.
"Production is down. Let's switch everyone to dev"
No, I'm very used to that. However, I use an actual provisioning and deployment tool that can deal with provisioning new production boxes. I don't just switch to dev.
@Sherif But I'm talking about locally you will be in a dev environment obviously and surely a test environment too. The test environment has different config. It uses a separate DB since it needs to load fixtures before integration and functional tests and purge the database repeatedly, it disables sending emails etc
Right, then reassign it. Don't just put it into production. That's what a provisioning tool should do. Take care of updating the proper configs and provisioning the box accordingly.
Right, read in context please. Clearly I'm saying you don't put a development environment into production. Not you can't reprovision a dev box to become a designated production box.
@ibanore Sorry about that. He always tends to have a fascinating way of going on tangents like that. The fact that it's a different environment suggests that it should be running under it's own VM. So when you provision your QA VM or your dev VM or your prod VM it should already have the environment setup. You shouldn't be trying to run a multitenant environment like that.
The environment should be fully autonomous such that it can be built up or torn down with ease through automation. So things like Chef, Vagrant, Jenkins CI, Ansible, etc... come in handy here.
If you do it this way you'll find that you shouldn't ever have to worry about writing new code or changing the user's behavior in order to deal with different environments.
I mean, can you imagine having to write different functional tests or systems tests between prod and dev because your end-point has to be changed in each?
I mean, I don't want to have to write different Selenium tests, for example, between prod and dev. I'd prefer the test suite work regardless of the environment.
If you separate the concern of changing the environment from that of actually running the code then you wouldn't have this problem. Which is why I'd prefer deploying a different config file to change environments over creating an new front controller for each environment.
I am writing web services for a mobile app using curl and yii2 framework.
I need to authorize request URL in my web service.
Below function is used to response a web service.
public function getFAQDetails(Request $request, Application $app){
$sql="SELECT FAQ_TITLE as faqtitle, FAQ_C...
Hey guys, I have a question about security. Let us say that I use a db connection php file to connect to the database, is it possible to view this file and its content if someone goes to that file path of that db connection php file
> ā Cancer | June 21 to July 22 Youāll soon stumble upon the secret to a happy marriageāa secret so simple youāll take perverse pleasure in keeping it from your wife. http://www.theonion.com/features/horoscope
I wonder what someone has to do to have their karma restricted/revoked ... the whole point of karma is making bad things happen to bad people ... I mean ... just ...
> "Directives in the configuration files may apply to the entire server, or they may be restricted to apply only to particular directories, files, hosts, or URLs. This document describes how to use configuration section containers or .htaccess files to change the scope of other configuration directives."
I would hope that they don't tbh, directives like Require are so far-reaching that it doesn't make a lot of sense to inherit them across discrete containers
Let's say I have <Directory /php> with SetHandler application-php-blah and then two vhost configs: one with an IPv6 listening on :8080 and one with an ipv4 listening on 8000. Does the /php apply to both vhosts then? In other words, Can I access vhost1:8080/php and vhost2:8000/php
@Gordon Depends. If the server has a document root set that complies with /php then yes. And if the vhosts don't specify another document root, then probably.
Remember, the server normally doesn't set a doc root restriction unless you're using httpd 2.4, in which case you have a /usr/share default or something like that.
@Gordon Not all of them, no. <Directory> does, but you have to take into consideration that it can also be overridden by local configuration further down.
@Gordon so everything I am reading - and details are sparse, weirdly, I'd have thought this would be clearly documented - suggests that everything outside vhosts is global == inheritable & overridable
httpd has a specific load order. It each loaded configuration overrides the previous and each runtime configuration overrides the previous. So if no DocumentRoot directive is set, <Directory> likely wouldn't even work in httpd 2.4, it gives you a restricted error.
Pre 2.4 it may or it may not depending on the access.
@Gordon e.g. httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/mod/mod_rewrite.html#rewriteengine "Note that rewrite configurations are not inherited by virtual hosts" suggesting this is a break from the norm. But also suggesting that - as you would expect - it's not an unbreakable rule, so you'd have to test it to be sure