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00:07
Hey, CakePHP newbie here. I'm creating a plugin with some composer dependencies. The libs are not available though. Do I have to manually include autoload.php? If so, where?
@PeeHaa Nice icon.
@Mauro your bootstrap file in your application preferably
@Tiffany I'm doing so. But that's for the main app. Composer dependencies under app/plugins/MyPlugin/vendor, are not being loaded that way
@Tiffany I'm must be missing something
@Mike tnx
01:14
Evening
 
1 hour later…
02:37
@DaveRandom I am trying to test your bot but it won't work
$ php ./bin/jeeves

Warning: require(/Users/XXX/Downloads/Jeeves-master/vendor/autoload.php): failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /Users/XXXX/Downloads/Jeeves-master/bootstrap.php on line 12

Fatal error: require(): Failed opening required '/Users/XXX/Downloads/Jeeves-master/vendor/autoload.php' (include_path='.:') in /Users/XXX/Downloads/Jeeves-master/bootstrap.php on line 12
02:56
Night all
Wes
Wes
03:54
mornin
running sudo do-release-upgrade -d on windows just feels friggin' weird
 
1 hour later…
05:21
@Fabor about a year of experience with aws, and around 1-2 months of exam prep
@PeeHaa then why did it fail?
Morns
how to pass this
0
Q: How to pass javascript array with HTML data into php array

Storm SpiritI want to pass array in javascript in php. but I only received an html, not an actual array when I put an html in my array. This is what it look like in Javascript console before passing it on my php. this is my code on my form, I just put it on my name="options" <form ...> <input ty...

need help
06:03
holy crap it works
06:15
Hello
Is it possible to structure a website in a way that I can use the php files in ajax calls while not allowing direct access to them from browsers?
I have problem coming up with a good structure. I put my php files(except one) in directories above public folder but now ajax calls need them to be directly accessible
(Now searched a bit, a front controller might be what I need)
Wes
Wes
06:51
\p
07:14
HI
I am using virtual box and vigrant . At my webpage I can see xdebug loaded
when I added phpinfo(); in my webpage
but in the browser it is also showing xdebug loaded .But when I went to that file (php.ini) which is mentioned in the phpinfo()
it doesnt contain xdebug
what could be possible way to find out
@PaulCrovella what works?
please ignore my above question
@mega6382 running the gnome browser on windows
I needed a webkit-based thing to try something
07:32
Hmmm, ok
Trying to figure out best practice. Use .env or a parameters.yaml file for database URL+Pass and Sendgrid token etc.
@JBis you didn't composer install. Also note that if you just want to play around with the bot (rather than do development work on it) you can do it here.
07:57
morning
... why the fuck does firefox not render svg filters within a display:none div container ... (having a container with some html fragments and that svg which I'm later accessing via <use xlink:href="#"/> ...)
anodyne anything that relieves distress or pain: The music was an anodyne to his grief.
08:23
Morning!
using env variables makes CI a hell of alot easier.
Thanks Web, thanks for the article, it explained it pretty well. To summarize what I understood. Env variables are api_keys/private stuff. Site-wide public stuff can be a global/constant.
like.. database in env , google_maps_api_key in constant/global (since it's publicly viewable in front-end)
nah?
I'd suggest all 3rd party api keys in env
whether it's shown in your app or not shouldn't matter
Alright, got it.
thank you!
08:32
@webmaster777 otoh it can also make dev more complicated, you want to be able to change values like that in dev without having to rebuild/restart the whole env - so it's worth having some sort of "overrides" file at least /cc @Darius
what matters if it's per deployment or for all deployments, and whether it contains sensitve data or not.
Gotcha. The overrides make sense too. Thank you.
@DaveRandom that makes this implementation (github.com/vlucas/phpdotenv#immutability) of .env sensible?
I mean using ->overload();
But only for dev
dunno would have to dig into it
Morning
How are ya, @DaveRandom?
08:37
@DaveRandom meh, restarting nginx or fpm is instant, it's not java
e.g. putting the env vars in nginx.conf is good enough, imho
hey guys i am trying to write a function that for a given number of days returns a value , can you help me please ?
0 for 1 to 100 days of work (so for example if my variable $days is equals to 101 i need to return 0 )
1 for 101 to 200 days of work
2 for 201 to 300 days of work
3 for 301 to 400 days of work
Etc..
@Joseph workdays or days?
Smells like homework :D
@Joseph what have you tried so far?
no just days @webmaster777
08:38
It's definitely worth asserting that any config files are not writable by the application, and refusing to load them if they are
if the app wants to shoot itself...
let it?
@webmaster777 he just needs a return $days / 100; or something of that sort
08:39
Lol
@FlorianMargaine destructibility by design :+)
@FlorianMargaine you implicitly already did a stat() so there's no significant perf difference, and it drastically reduces the chances of some 0-day exploit somewhere else in the app (shitty file upload, for example)
@webmaster777 i am looking for the logic more so then the tools :) , i can't figure out an algorithm to take care of every case
same reason as the permissions check on .ssh/authorized_keys basically @FlorianMargaine
08:42
there's no good reason for it to be writable, and checking that it isn't reduces the attack surface in a way that's basically free
yeah root-owned + 0444 is good enough
or something
@Tiffany good tnx :-)
/me out for a bit
@FlorianMargaine hey sir, yes dividing by 100 is a good start but how would you take care of the upper edge , if $days = 300 i need 2 returned and not 3
@Joseph ($days - 1) / 100?
screws the lower edge ?
oh wait i can round
08:48
why do you want to round?
0 needs to be a special case anyway
well because if i substract 1 , say i have a 201 => will return 1
why?
201 - 1 = 200, 200 / 100 = 2
oh damn i am du*b
thanks
you can say "dumb"
or "shit", "fuck", "piss"
Guys, "come up" is right or "come out"?
- Hope other experienced members come out with helpful replies.
- Hope other experienced members come up with helpful replies.
08:51
up
whelp, just killed 15 mins going through jeeves twitter
09:03
hiii
help me with the code , i want to output store name single time from db
here is my code :
$query=mysqli_query($conn,"select * from `coupons` ORDER BY id DESC");
while($row=mysqli_fetch_array($query)){
echo $row['store'];
}
this is echoing store name multiple times
hi, what is the best way to make PDO escape quotes ? I want to use a variable with ORDER BY .
@Srinivas08 use group by store
@O.Rares tq , worked
i have xls file , is there any way to upload the data to sql db
so , that i can further use php to read data from db
build a converter for xls
to get an .sql file
@O.Rares you want to generate your query by concatenating it with a PHP variable ?
@AymDev yes, using bindParam, it works for all queries but for GROUP BY ? ? it always adds quotes
so I can't prepare the table name or the 'ASC' string
09:12
I'm trying to filter a string for forbidden words and the following check returns true even though it shouldn't: preg_match('/\bam\b/', "amına", $match);
If I change the text into "amina", it works as expected.
@O.Rares check this answer it will probably help you: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2542410/how-do-i-set-order-by-params-using-prepared-pdo-statement#answer-2543144
And if the ORDER clause can depend on a SQL condition, you can ORDER BY using CASE: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19486882/case-when-statement-for-order-by-clause
"ı" in "amına" is a lowercase "i" without the dot
I believe this is a locale specific problem
is preg_match not locale aware? How can I fix this?
@AymDev I saw that but I was wondering if there is a solution with PDO that will look more clean
@O.Rares not sure, I always did like that, you can't prepare everything. As long as you don't insert user inputs it's okay I guess.
is there some math function that when given 2 retuns 100 , 3 returns 1000 ...
09:23
@AymDev I'll use this method then, thanks
@Joseph no, it's simple math. Do your homework.
@akinuri your question is confusing - as amina gives the same results for me 3v4l.org/e9Kc8
using the u flag makes preg handle unicode. But that's not the problem in your code, probably.
09:44
@Danack the "u" modifier :|
missed that
Does this make sense? Trying to make a unique token. $token = sha1(bin2hex(random_bytes(15)).'salt'); Just trying to make it not guessable... Feels like I'm salting/sha1'ing something I shouldn't.
the bin2hex seems overkill too.
@Joseph try this 3v4l.org/34Bhp
@Darius do you need the token to be readable or transferable?
transferable
09:54
why not base64 encode the bytes?
the salt seems overkill too
$token = base64_encode(random_bytes(15));
bin2hex(random_bytes(15))
but what do you want to do?
@mega6382 ahem **
basically a CSRF token
why don't you use what your framework is providing?
09:57
after realizing/remembering the term .. it came up.
@PaulCrovella hahaha, completely ignored the most basic solution. Imma fool :P
the token isn't going to be used for forms. It's to validate a cart/a security measure for logged out members.
I read an article about setting a 2nd cookie with a token, and check session_id + cookie to validate. 2nd cookie basically links to unique cart with matching session_id
and reason I don't use built in framework csrf, is because it doesn't put the csrf in the cookie, it puts it in session :p
you're not trusting the session id?
no
invalidates session if 2nd cookie doesn't match the session id's hash/token stored in session
BUt if you have access to the session id, you'll probably have access to the "token"
I'm trying to imagine what kind of CSRF scenario might happen that you're trying to secure
10:07
I'm trying to think of how to say why
Basically saw 2 sites mention a cart_hash cookie. Woocommerce uses this for their cart too. docs.woocommerce.com/document/woocommerce-cookies
It doesn't mention why they create a cart_hash cookie but saw another article trying to explain what's in there, but not what it's used for. But from what I understood. Store cart data in database for each user
> ... and helps WooCommerce know when the cart data changes.
If there's ever a collission in session_id's , it won't let a person see another person's cart, and will likely expire/delete from database by the time session_id is reused.
So.. the comment you just made is one of the reasons I saw, but why would anyone want to know cart data has changed?
If you're experiencing session_id collisions, you're in a whole new world of heck
I'm not, it was my misunderstanding that it could happen. (or someone trying session hi-jacking, but guessing SSL takes care of this?)
@Darius To only perform updates to your backend store if shit has changed?
@Darius SSL is not going to fix session hi-jacking
10:12
Updates like what? User added 2 products to cart, what could I need to change in back-end if product wasn't bought yet.
it might prevent actual attackers from MITM
Wouldn't this 2nd cookie prevent session-hijacking then?
(that's why I'm confused about this cookie, but it seems I need it.. but i'm making wrong decisions because I don't understand the use of it)
@Darius I'm not sure you need it.
It looks like you don't
It sounds more like an extra security layer which prevents unlikely scenarios
Seems like it, saw amazon use this method too for something. They have 2-3 cookies if any one of those changes, it restarts entire session
and replaces all cookies
I'll abandon the idea for now then and continue coding. Have to figure out what that 2nd cookie is for at some point. Why amazon is using it at-least, or why woocommerce cares if cart changed.
You'd think it knew it changed when it did something to it.. lol
@Darius Unless mutations are done client-side
10:22
what do you mean?
for javascript purposes?
for example
If adding a product to your cart first updates the cart client-side
and only submits these changes whenever navigating
I don't imply I know how woocommerce works
but the second cookie seems only partly an integrity check
@FlorianMargaine also "bum" and "willyflaps"
but not r*by
So like, update product quantity via javascript (no ajax), but when they click to another page, before changing pages it sends a request, updates the cart quantity and then finally redirects to the page they wanted to go to?
sounds fragile
Thanks webmaster for taking your time to explain. I know noob questions like these can be frusturating.
Ive seen the term integrity check for cart come up from time to time too. Don't get how the 2nd cookie would do anything for integrity.
but I think this convo is moving towards the answer I was looking for. It comes down to, what does 2nd cookie do, to give "integrity". I understand the meaning of integrity.. but how does it come into play
Is it so when they're checking out, and they open a new tab, add a product, and go back to the other tab and click "Submit Payment" it won't charge them and say cart has changed?
That sorta seems to make sense to me, but why not just submit product ID's and quantity during pay right?
10:46
Mornginsins
11:12
@Darius An integrity check is purely to prevent application mistakes, whether they originate from the user doing something stupid or the application messing things up (client or server side). A session id, however, is part of your application's security measures, and should not be counterfeited or stolen.
Since web applications are fragile (we cannot rely on the user) an integrity check makes sense, especially when payment is involved.
@Darius I think this is exactly a scenario the second cookie should prevent the user from starting a payment process
@mega6382 Permissions most likely
It's not user friendly, but usually the amount you're going to pay pops up like 3 or 4 times during checkout. (especially if a 3rd party payment provider is involved).
Good morning
@PeeHaa Spent all of that time finding the right tables to query in Magento only to look at the data and say... "I cannot deduct anything useful from this." =/ Hate when that happens.
11:23
Yeah that sucks
@PeeHaa uhuh
11:50
Kittens.
12:01
puppies
Afternoon
Who thinks breaking a web form into single fields that get submitted on change, is a good way to implement web forms in general?
12:17
Why would you want to do that?
@Code4R7 In general, people have specific validation rules about which data is required and which is optional. If you submit each field separately, there's no way to validate the data before you store it.
Users would never have to hit a 'save' or 'send' button, much like the iPhone experience
@Code4R7 I usually find it pretty confusing when there's no save button. Unless the UI makes it really clear that the data is being saved automatically.
Another advantage would be that when a form contains a report or something larger, the session will not expire
@Code4R7 Editing a document online is a specific case where auto-saving may be useful.
12:22
If the form is going to contain a text field for possibly long comments I just send them to a separate page after the initial fields. That way session doesn't expire.
@jjok the validation argument is not that big of a problem; user input is always sanitised, the disadvantage would be that one needs to store incomplete forms on the server before they can be considered 'final'. Before that stage the form can be validated.
But UI confusion and browser forgiveness (like undo) could be an issue.
@Code4R7 Yep. that's what I meant.
> the disadvantage would be that one needs to store incomplete forms on the server before they can be considered 'final'
You'd need a separate flag in the database to say if the data is valid or not.
I'm currently using a timestamp that indicates when something is finalised. NULL means it is not final...
@Code4R7 That is a terrible idea
But it works :)
12:27
Unless you have a good reason for it I only seen it backfiring by the added complexity and user confusion from it
@Code4R7 "works"
@Code4R7 the form software I use, Machform, has a feature to allow users to save a form to finish later, but I have to enable it for the form. Any larger form I have that feature enabled
If things that worked and things that were a terrible idea were mutually exclusive, programming would be a lot easier.
the 'final' timestamp is something that determines the final state of the document, so the document can not be edited afterwards by the user. Before a document is made 'final' a user is asked for confirmation twice and data is validated with all rules as well.
This final state helps to enforce a workflow
You seem to be set on your answer. Why ask us?
Maybe try adding a third confirmation, just to be sure?
12:32
best of five
My question is not so much about the final state, I've got it working for years now by implementing a second XHR ping that keeps the session alive automatically. But now my users request this feature that anything they enter is saved automatically so that any information entered can not be lost.
Which is why I was thinking of splitting up the form into separate fields that are stored automatically.
@Code4R7 Why don't you just change the length of the session?
Or not have forms which take hours to fill in if possibke
I used to want to keep the session length as short as possible for security
@PeeHaa Isn't that the PHP motto? "It just works. Don't ask"
8
12:35
that was before I wrote a custom session handler that only starts a session AFTER a user logged in
so the short answer to the session length is: legacy code :)
I was just wondering if you have any experience with this form-splitting idea and have some pros and cons.
@Code4R7 How is the quality or age of the code related to making changes to the PHP ini?
@Code4R7 How does that help you with anything?
You need to give out a new session once the privileges are elevated anyway
@Code4R7 That's a new one. I have no idea how "shorter sessions" is more secure
The thing I am assuming is stupid users not logging out on public spaces
anyway, my app has to support users that can take a full day before they hit 'submit'
in the meantime the session is not to expire
12:40
@Code4R7 It sounds like you need a session that doesn't expire for a full day then.
and in the early code I started a session just to check if a user logged in, starting a new session for unchallenged users as well.
@Code4R7 In that specific case and if that really is the case a draft form storage is ok
Would be the same as a user starting filling his shopping basket, but not checking out
I've got to support psychiastrists that write forensic reports, who are used to MS-Word and don't give a damn about technology :)
but at least I now know that my idea is uncommon, and that it backfires
Well.. thanks for the support. I'm gonna give it a try. See if I can hook up some callbacks like those Windows 3.1 form builders had in the old days
I'll let you know when I've failed :)
@Code4R7 Not so much uncommon. Just related to specific business cases
@Machavity the shorter the sessions, the faster users are logged out when they are not active, shortening the attack vector on session ID's
12:50
@Code4R7 Wait wat
What attack vector?
Thanks @PeeHaa
@PeeHaa stealing the session
That's too broad
aka why you're using a new session ID for every session, and not a single token that you remember forever and reuse all the time
I know @FlorianMargaine
I was asking OP what specific attack vector
And you kinda ruined it... :P
Now the answer is going to be: yeah that one
12:52
I've tried to implement all applicable recommendations from OWASP, implemented all rules from ISO 27k....
Do you need to do the hippaa dance?
yeah, our government takes security seriously.
unless they send e-mail...
yeah was just about to say :P
"seriously"
all that is without encryption or anything ...
but my app is PENtested and everything
How often?
12:54
once in a few years
I've got this book "Hackers Playbook 2"
It's better than most of the applications though
:)
I'm doing my homework to prevent anything bad from happening, knowing that it never will be enough
Are the pentesters any good?
12:56
depends
the best way to defend your application is to keep as much as possible unknown
It sucks if you have bad ones
As in total waste of everbody's time
I do know that I have to use ZAP more often
it's really cool
Yeah I know the project
The automated part almost never works for me
I can't afford PENtests myself, because I'm a volunteer
Lost of false positives
12:59
why not ?
yeah..

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