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$_REQUEST — HTTP Request 变量
默认情况下包含了 $_GET , $_POST 和 $_COOKIE 的 数组 。
版本 | 说明 |
---|---|
5.3.0 | 引入 request_order。该指令会影响 $_REQUEST 的内容。 |
4.3.0 | $_FILES 信息被从 $_REQUEST 中移除。 |
4.1.0 | 引入 $_REQUEST 。 |
Note:
“Superglobal”也称为自动化的全局变量。这就表示其在脚本的所有作用域中都是可用的。不需要在函数或方法中用 global $variable; 来访问它。
Note:
以命令行方式运行时,将不包含 argv 和 argc 信息;它们将存在于 $_SERVER 数组 。
Note:
由于 $_REQUEST 中的变量通过 GET,POST 和 COOKIE 输入机制传递给脚本文件,因此可以被远程用户篡改而并不可信。这个数组的项目及其顺序依赖于 PHP 的 variables_order 指令的配置。
[#1] mike o. [2010-03-11 16:31:13]
The default php.ini on your system as of in PHP 5.3.0 may exclude cookies from $_REQUEST. The request_order ini directive specifies what goes in the $_REQUEST array; if that does not exist, then the variables_order directive does. Your distribution's php.ini may exclude cookies by default, so beware.
[#2] John Galt [2009-12-06 17:36:34]
I wrote a function because I found it inconvenient if I needed to change a particular parameter (get) while preserving the others. For example, I want to make a hyperlink on a web page with the URL http://www.example.com/script.php?id=1&blah=blah+blah&page=1 and change the value of "page" to 2 without getting rid of the other parameters.
<?php
function add_or_change_parameter($parameter, $value)
{
$params = array();
$output = "?";
$firstRun = true;
foreach($_GET as $key=>$val)
{
if($key != $parameter)
{
if(!$firstRun)
{
$output .= "&";
}
else
{
$firstRun = false;
}
$output .= $key."=".urlencode($val);
}
}
if(!$firstRun)
$output .= "&";
$output .= $parameter."=".urlencode($value);
return htmlentities($output);
}
?>
Now, I can add a hyperlink to the page (http://www.example.com/script.php?id=1&blah=blah+blah&page=1) like this:
<a href="
<?php echo add_or_change_parameter("page", "2"); ?>
">Click to go to page 2</a>
The above code will output
<a href="?id=1&blah=blah+blah&page=2">Click to go to page 2</a>
Also, if I was setting "page" to a string rather than just "2", the value would be urlencode()'d.
<a href="
<?php echo add_or_change_parameter("page", "banana+split!"); ?>
">Click to go to page banana split!</a>
would become
<a href="?id=1&blah=blah+blah&page=banana+split%21">Click to go to page banana split!</a>
[EDIT BY danbrown AT php DOT net: Contains a bugfix provided by (theogony AT gmail DOT com), which adds missing `echo` instructions to the HREF tags.]
[#3] strata_ranger at hotmail dot com [2008-07-17 08:04:22]
Don't forget, because $_REQUEST is a different variable than $_GET and $_POST, it is treated as such in PHP -- modifying $_GET or $_POST elements at runtime will not affect the ellements in $_REQUEST, nor vice versa.
e.g:
<?php
$_GET['foo'] = 'a';
$_POST['bar'] = 'b';
var_dump($_GET); // Element 'foo' is string(1) "a"
var_dump($_POST); // Element 'bar' is string(1) "b"
var_dump($_REQUEST); // Does not contain elements 'foo' or 'bar'
?>
If you want to evaluate $_GET and $_POST variables by a single token without including $_COOKIE in the mix, use $_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'] to identify the method used and set up a switch block accordingly, e.g:
<?php
switch($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'])
{
case 'GET': $the_request = &$_GET; break;
case 'POST': $the_request = &$_POST; break;
.
. // Etc.
.
default:
}
?>