This is more of a warning than of a question, but someone may be able to provide a better solution.
I am sending a custom request header from my Android application.
When the request arrives on the PHP server, I check for the existence of this header and its values.
To do this, I get the header array with apache_request_headers()
and then do a check for the header with array_key_exists()
.
However, array_key_exists('custom-header', $Hdr)
will return false !
So I dump the array with print_r and, lo and behold, the array key does exist in the array.
Here is the output :
Array
(
[Accept-Encoding] => gzip
[Connection] => Keep-Alive
[Content-Type] => application/x-www-form-urlencoded
[Content-Length] => 103
[Host] => www.somedomain.com
[custom-header] => my-custom-header-value
)
How did I get around this ?
Clone the array like this :
// recuperate the request headers
$Hdr = apache_request_headers();
// clone the array as it will not correctly search with array_key_exists
$Keys = array_keys($Hdr);
$Values = array_values($Hdr);
$Headers = array();
for($i = 0; $i < count($Keys); $i++)
{
$Headers[$Keys[$i]] = $Values[$i];
}
Now when I query the new array with array_key_exists('custom-header', $Headers)
, it returns true !
Is this a known problem ?
Is there a better solution ?
NOTE : I have changed the names of the real values to protect my code, this is given here as an example - please do not post corrections to these values :-)
EDIT : This occurs on my shared server running PHP version 5.3.10 on Apache version 2.2.22
isset($Hdr["Custom-header"])
return true?