I have been looking at this problem for quite a while now and cannot seem to figure out why I keep receiving null after my $.ajax function is called.I input an associative array that contains my method name and then call my method in PHP to return a j son string back to the front end. I receive null when I call alert in my java script. Here is my code
Java script:
$(document).ready(function()
{
var data = {};
data["Method"] = "test";
$.ajax({
url:"test.php/test",
data: data,
type:"POST",
contentType:"application/json",
dataType:"json",
success: function(data){
alert(data);
},
error:function(data, textStatus, error)
{
}
});
});
PHP:
<?
//require_once("database.php");
class methods
{
function __contructor()
{
if(isset($_POST["Method"]))
{
$function = $_POST["Method"];
call_user_func($function);
}
else
{
echo "{\"status\":\"false\"}";
}
}
function test()
{
$json = array(
"kyle" => "broflowksi",
"eric" => "cartman",
"stan" => "marsh"
);
echo json_encode($json);
}
}
$method = new methods();
?>
data
object in one step:var data = { Method : "test" };
- or even include that object directly within the Ajax call withdata : { Method : "test" }
.$_POST
value. Personally I'd either make a list of allowed functions or make a hash table of anonymous functions of which to call. In the current state you are very vulnerable to attacks, especially if you allow users to pass arguments as well.