Currently I have a bit of a 'different' set-up. My main files are on server1; this server simply delivers the content through php and mysql. But that's just the front end. In the back, on server2 (homeserver), are alot of different scripts doing various things that could not be done on server1, since it's a shared host and thus resources are limited.
This setup works great. If server2 loses power or something the site won't be updated, but what's there is still available, and it can just catch up once back online. But here's the problem; all scripts on the homeserver are wide open for everyone to execute. As an example, my database-syncing script;
Server1 detects it's databases hasn't been synced up with the one on server2, so it initiates the syncing script.
<?php
//This initiates the script on server2, which then dumps it's database into a .sql file
file_get_contents('http://server2.x.com/backup/backup_mysql.php');
//This reads out and saves said database file locally for processing
$myresult2 = file_get_contents('http://server2.x.com/backup/backups/db-backup.sql');
file_put_contents_atomic("backups/db-backup.sql", $myresult2);
//This will delete the backup file from server2
$deleteurl = 'http://server2.x.com/backup/backup_mysql.php?delete=true';
$myresult3 = file_get_contents($deleteurl);
//This initiates bigdump for processing the sql file
include_once('bigdump.php');
?>
As you can see, this opens up some obvious security flaws. *backup_mysql.php* can be used by anyone who knows the address to server2 and even once that's fixed, someone who monitors the /backup folder can retrieve the sql backup before my script deletes it again.
How do I prevent all this from happening?
http://user:[email protected]/blalba.php
- Wouldn't a smart user be able to intercept that link and thus obtain my username and password?curl
). Commercial SSL certificates are only needed if you need them to be recognized as valid by the rest of the world as well.