I need to send "500 Internal Server Error" from an PHP script under certain conditions. The script is supposed to be called by a third party app. The script contains a couple of die("this happend") statements for which I need to send the 500 Internal Server Error response code instead of the usual 200 OK. The third party script will re-send the request under certain conditions which include not receiving the 200 OK response code.

Second part of the question: I need to setup my script like this:

<?php
    custom_header( "500 Internal Server Error" );

    if ( that_happened ) {
        die( "that happened" )
    }

    if ( something_else_happened ) {
        die( "something else happened" )
    }

    update_database( );

    // the script can also fail on the above line
    // e.g. a mysql error occurred

    remove_header( "500" );
?>

I need to send 200 header only after the last line has been executed.

Edit

A side question: can I send strange 500 headers such as these:

HTTP/1.1 500 No Record Found
HTTP/1.1 500 Script Generated Error (E_RECORD_NOT_FOUND)
HTTP/1.1 500 Conditions Failed on Line 23

Will such errors get logged by the webserver?

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is not doable when u sent header and remove header later – ajreal Nov 12 '10 at 7:39
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5 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted
header($_SERVER['SERVER_PROTOCOL'] . ' 500 Internal Server Error', true, 500);
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You can simplify it like this:

if ( that_happened || something else_happened )
{
    header('x', true, 500);
    die;
}

Added: If you need to know exactly what went wrong, do something like this:

if ( that_happened )
{
    header('x', true, 500);
    die('that happened');
}

if ( something else_happened )
{
    header('x', true, 500);
    die('something else_happened');
}
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2  
Now what is 'x' supposed to be? – Core Xii Nov 12 '10 at 6:49
+1 Note that the first parameter in header must be a non-empty string. That it is 'x' doesn't really matter. – theazureshadow Nov 12 '10 at 6:49
1  
@Core Xii, first parameter must not be null as @theazureshadow pointed out. In short, by calling header('something', true, 500), the correct header "HTTP/1.0 500 Internal Server Error" will be returned. You may call me lazy, but it's easier to just pass the error code than to handle actual header string :) Take a look at php.net/manual/en/function.header.php for more details. – David Kuridža Nov 12 '10 at 6:54
The manual isn't very clear about this. So you're saying that if you force the status code, PHP overwrites the string argument to its correct value automatically? Then why would the manual say that it only takes effect if the string isn't empty? – Core Xii Nov 12 '10 at 7:25
Correct, see quote from the manual, "$http_response_code: Forces the HTTP response code to the specified value. Note that this parameter only has an effect if the $string is not empty.". I have no idea why is it done this way :) – David Kuridža Nov 12 '10 at 8:18
show 2 more comments
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You may use the following function to send a status change:

function header_status($statusCode) {
    static $status_codes = null;

    if ($status_codes === null) {
        $status_codes = array (
            100 => 'Continue',
            101 => 'Switching Protocols',
            102 => 'Processing',
            200 => 'OK',
            201 => 'Created',
            202 => 'Accepted',
            203 => 'Non-Authoritative Information',
            204 => 'No Content',
            205 => 'Reset Content',
            206 => 'Partial Content',
            207 => 'Multi-Status',
            300 => 'Multiple Choices',
            301 => 'Moved Permanently',
            302 => 'Found',
            303 => 'See Other',
            304 => 'Not Modified',
            305 => 'Use Proxy',
            307 => 'Temporary Redirect',
            400 => 'Bad Request',
            401 => 'Unauthorized',
            402 => 'Payment Required',
            403 => 'Forbidden',
            404 => 'Not Found',
            405 => 'Method Not Allowed',
            406 => 'Not Acceptable',
            407 => 'Proxy Authentication Required',
            408 => 'Request Timeout',
            409 => 'Conflict',
            410 => 'Gone',
            411 => 'Length Required',
            412 => 'Precondition Failed',
            413 => 'Request Entity Too Large',
            414 => 'Request-URI Too Long',
            415 => 'Unsupported Media Type',
            416 => 'Requested Range Not Satisfiable',
            417 => 'Expectation Failed',
            422 => 'Unprocessable Entity',
            423 => 'Locked',
            424 => 'Failed Dependency',
            426 => 'Upgrade Required',
            500 => 'Internal Server Error',
            501 => 'Not Implemented',
            502 => 'Bad Gateway',
            503 => 'Service Unavailable',
            504 => 'Gateway Timeout',
            505 => 'HTTP Version Not Supported',
            506 => 'Variant Also Negotiates',
            507 => 'Insufficient Storage',
            509 => 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded',
            510 => 'Not Extended'
        );
    }

    if ($status_codes[$statusCode] !== null) {
        $status_string = $statusCode . ' ' . $status_codes[$statusCode];
        header($_SERVER['SERVER_PROTOCOL'] . ' ' . $status_string, true, $statusCode);
    }
}

You may use it as such:

<?php
header_status(500);

if (that_happened) {
    die("that happened")
}

if (something_else_happened) {
    die("something else happened")
}

update_database();

header_status(200);
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1  
I like the function, however you should use a switch statement instead of an array. A switch statement will only use 3% of the memory an array would use. (from my little test pastebin.com/kcMx7tUz ) – Petah Nov 12 '10 at 7:16
1  
Saving a couple bytes of memory is rarely a good reason to write web application code one way or another. – Dan Grossman Nov 12 '10 at 8:04
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Your code should look like :

<?php
if ( that_happened ) {
    header("HTTP/1.0 500 Internal Server Error");
    die();
}

if ( something_else_happened ) {
    header("HTTP/1.0 500 Internal Server Error");
    die();
}

// Your function should return FALSE if something goes wrong
if ( !update_database() ) {
    header("HTTP/1.0 500 Internal Server Error");
    die();
}

// the script can also fail on the above line
// e.g. a mysql error occurred


header('HTTP/1.1 200 OK');
?>

I assume you stop execution if something goes wrong.

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You can just put:

header("HTTP/1.0 500 Internal Server Error");

inside your conditions like:

if (that happened) {
    header("HTTP/1.0 500 Internal Server Error");
}

As for the database query, you can just do that like this:

$result = mysql_query("..query string..") or header("HTTP/1.0 500 Internal Server Error");

You should remember that you have to put this code before any html tag (or output).

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