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i have a php page

While running it will display following messages

Warning: mysql_select_db() [function.mysql-select-db]: Access denied for user 'test'@'localhost' (using password: NO) in test_step2.php on line 64

Warning: mysql_select_db() [function.mysql-select-db]: A link to the server could not be established in test_step2.php on line 64

Notice: Undefined variable: exists in test_step2.php on line 341

I want to avoid the displaying of these messages

I have no access to php.ini file

i have tried the following code one by one to avoid the displaying of these messages

  • error_reporting(0)

  • ini_set('display_errors',0);

  • error_reporting(E_NONE);

but no use

Can any one help me to avoid the display of these messages

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    Why do you try to connect to the database if you don't need it? What's the test_step2.php file for?
    – JJJ
    Oct 17, 2011 at 19:47
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    @JohnCartwright I assume that if the notices are the only problem, the script works. And if it works without a database connection, wouldn't the simplest solution be to just delete the lines that throw the notices?
    – JJJ
    Oct 17, 2011 at 19:53
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    The error output is there for a reason. Disabling it is the wrong way to fix this problem. If you want to use the database, check the credentials, if you don't, remove those lines. PHP gives these notices to help you, ignoring them will only lead to bigger problems in the future, trust me. Fix your code, don't ignore it.
    – gen_Eric
    Oct 17, 2011 at 19:54
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    @JohnCartwright: This is on topic. We could tell him how to disable error messages, but the "more correct" solution here is to fix the errors. We're giving alternative advice, not going off topic. Also, who said anything about showing the errors to the client. I'd hope a capable PHP dev would fix his errors before the client ever sees the page.
    – gen_Eric
    Oct 17, 2011 at 19:57
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    @Rocket Of course he should fix the errors. But that is not what his question is about, now is it? Imagine a situation where your database goes down. You should handle the errors gracefully, not dump PHP errors and a stack-trace to the client. Oct 17, 2011 at 20:00

3 Answers 3

2

Disabling the errors here is probably a bad idea. Instead of hiding the messages, you should try to fix them. PHP gives notices for a reason, not fixing them could lead to bigger issues in the future.

You should check your database credentials to fix the connection errors, not just ignore the errors. Don't you need the database in your program? Why else would you connect to it? If you don't need the database, then remove those lines from the script.

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Are you including other files that are changing your error settings? If not try

@mysql_select_db(...);
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edit .htaccess file

php_value error_reporting 0
php_flag display_errors Off

or contact server administrator...

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