Saturday, August 17, 2013

PHP HTTP Authentication


Occasionally you may wish to make certain pages of your site only viewable to a select few. you can do this by using PHPs built in HTTP Authentication. The code needs to go right at the top of your php page so don’t get ‘Headers Already Sent’ errors. You can see that we’ve specified the username and password in the variables at the top of the script you can change these to reflect your own username and password.
You could easily make this authentication more dynamic by checking a database for the username and password. We can get whatever the user typed into the dropdown box by specifying the following superglobals.
           //Username:
           <?php echo $_SERVER['PHP_AUTH_USER'];?>
           //Password:
           <?php echo $_SERVER['PHP_AUTH_PW'];?>


<?php

$config['admin_username'] = "demo";
$config['admin_password'] = "demo";


if (!($_SERVER['PHP_AUTH_USER'] == $config['admin_username'] && $_SERVER['PHP_AUTH_PW'] == $config['admin_password'])) {
    header("WWW-Authenticate: Basic realm=\"Papermashup.com Demo Admin\"");
    header("HTTP/1.0 401 Unauthorized");
    echo 'This is what happens if you press cancel';
    ?>
<?php
    exit;
}
// if the username and password match show the rest of the content

?>
Be careful when coding the HTTP header lines. In order to guarantee maximum compatibility with all browsers, the keyword “Basic” should be written with an uppercase “B”, the realm string must be enclosed in double (not single) quotes, and exactly one space should precede the 401 code in the HTTP/1.0 401 header line.

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