php://input <> $_POST?
I'm experimenting with Firefox's Content Security Policy. Basically it's a special header for the webpage that tells the browser which resources are valid.
When some resource is invalid because it's breaks the policy, Firefox sends a report to a given URI in json format.
This is a typical report
array(1) {
["csp-report"]=>
array(4) {
["request"]=>
string(71) "GET http://example.com/?function=detail&id=565 HTTP/1.1"
["request-headers"]=>
string(494) "Host: example.com
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1; rv:2.0b10pre) Gecko/20110115 Firefox/4.0b10pre
Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8
Accept-Language: es-ar,en-us;q=0.8,es;q=0.5,en;q=0.3
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
Accept-Charset: UTF-8,*
Keep-Alive: 115
Connection: keep-alive
Referer: http://example.com/index.php?function=search&query=Pata+de+cambio+
Cookie: the cookie
"
["blocked-uri"]=>
string(4) "self"
["violated-directive"]=>
string(30) "inline script base restriction"
}
}
The content type is applic开发者_运维技巧ation/json; charset=UTF-8
Now. I would expect this to be avaliable in $_POST as REQUEST_METHOD==POST but post is always empty. I can access it from php://input, but the question is: Why the request isn't avaliable in $_POST?
I can't even use filter_input and $_REQUEST is empty...
$_POST
gives you form variables, which show up in the page like this:
POST /some_path HTTP/1.1
myvar=something&secondvar=somethingelse
But what you're getting isn't a valid query string. It probably looks something like this:
POST /some_path HTTP/1.1
{'this':'is a JSON object','notice':'it\'s not a valid query string'}
php://input
gives you everything after the headers in raw form, so in this case I think it's the only way to get what you want.
If a request is sent as POST
it is not necessarily encoded as normal application/x-www-form-urlencoded
or multipart/form-data
. Should Firefox send a JSON body, then PHP doesn't know how to decode it.
You have to check $_SERVER["HTTP_CONTENT_TYPE"]
. If it contains application/json
then you must indeed read php://stdin:
if (stripos($_SERVER["HTTP_CONTENT_TYPE"], "application/json")===0) {
$_POST = json_decode(file_get_contents("php://input"));
// or something like that
It can be several of other http request types (I am aware of 7 right now, and several place holders for more to come).
I would print the $_REQUEST
and $_SERVER
to see how it actually arrives.
精彩评论