15

I know this has been covered before but I cannot find an answer to this,

I have always used this;

header("Location: http://www.website.com/");
exit();

This has always worked in my current project and all of a sudden it is not working in any of my browsers

I would like to figure out the problem and fix it instead of using

echo "<script type='text/javascript'>window.top.location='http://website.com/';</script>";

I also have error reporting enabled and it shows no errors

// SET ERROR REPORTING
error_reporting(E_ALL ^ E_WARNING ^ E_NOTICE);
ini_set('display_errors', TRUE);

Any ideas why it will not work?

2
  • 4
    ^ is xor so: E_ALL ^ E_WARNING ^ E_NOTICE = 111111111 ^ 000001000 ^ 000000010 = 111110101 meaning all errors except warnings and notices.
    – danamlund
    Aug 6, 2009 at 23:30
  • thanks I wish I would of found this out a long time ago, there must be thousands of notices now on my site =(
    – JasonDavis
    Aug 6, 2009 at 23:37

14 Answers 14

27

Try:

error_reporting(E_ALL | E_WARNING | E_NOTICE);
ini_set('display_errors', TRUE);


flush();
header("Location: http://www.website.com/");
die('should have redirected by now');

See what you get. You shouldn't use ^ (xor) in your error_reporting() call because you're unintentionally asking for all errors EXCEPT notices and warnings.. which is what a 'headers already sent' error is.

Edit:

Also try putting flush() right above your header() call.

4
  • Yes that seems to be the problem, headers already sent, it says line 45 which is this; <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; utf-8" /> I don't see how to fix this yet
    – JasonDavis
    Aug 6, 2009 at 23:46
  • Weird thing is I have been doing it this way for a long time on this server and it just now quit working, thing is I include a header file and the redirect is getting called in the included file so I am not sure how to make it work since the header file is already printed out by the time it reaches my redirect
    – JasonDavis
    Aug 6, 2009 at 23:48
  • 4
    You can't have ANY output whatsoever before using header()
    – Mike B
    Aug 6, 2009 at 23:49
  • As Mike B said. I removed my echo's before and now it works. :+1: Jul 21, 2017 at 14:25
21

COMMON PROBLEMS:

1) there should not be any output (i.e. echo.. or HTML codes) before the header(.......); command.

2) there should not be a white-space(or newline) before <?php and after ?> tags.

3) GOLDER RULE! - the file (and other include()-d files) should have UTF8 without BOM encoding (and not just UTF-8). That is problem in many cases (because typical UTF8 encoded file has something special character in the start of file output)!!!!!!!!!!!

4) When redirecting, after header(...); you must use exit;

5) Recommended practice - always use 301 or 302 in reference:

header("location: http://example.com",  true,  301 );  exit;

6) If none of above helps, use JAVSCRIPT redirection(but it's highly not recommended By Google), but it may be the last chance...:

echo "<script type='text/javascript'>window.top.location='http://example.com/';</script>"; exit;
1
  • UTF-8 encoding! This solved it for me. Worked with encoding set to UTF-8 in notepad++ but not with UTF-8-BOM, they changed it for notepad++
    – bastelflp
    Dec 14, 2015 at 20:09
13

Try removing the Space Between location and the first h in http.

header("Location: http://www.website.com/");
exit();

turns into

header("Location:http://www.website.com/");
exit();

I had this problem on my WAMP Server.

Although it shouldn't be the problem, considering that is how it is documented in the PHP documentation. But you should probably try it anyway. I know it has worked for me in a number of cases.

2
  • 1
    "removing the Space Between location and the first h in http." works like a charm, Many thanks. Mar 12, 2014 at 7:47
  • I had this problem as well. Safari, Explorer and Firefox seemed to work ok. Chrome was intermittent and mobile Safari just refused. Grr.
    – Mc.Stever
    Nov 27, 2015 at 16:23
6

try this. worked for me.

echo "<meta http-equiv='refresh' content='0;url=http://www.yoursite.com'>";

2

Try this (working for me):

echo '<script>window.location.replace("http://www.example.com")</script>';

Instead of

header("Location: http://www.example.com");

1

Also when you are using the header function it has to be the first thing called before any text (even a space) is written to the client, so check again that there is no spaces being output prior to your call even before th

<?php
1
  • He isn't getting any errors. It would throw an error if this is the case. Aug 6, 2009 at 23:22
1

It may be strange solution but try this, change the page encoding from utf8 to ANSI and it will work.

use any text editor and save the page as ANSI encoding and upload it to your online server.

1
  • If this helps, the problem is probably the UTF-8-with-BOM encoding, as mentioned above.
    – bastelflp
    Dec 14, 2015 at 20:32
1

Adding ob_start() solved this issue.

0

What exactly happens when you visit the page? You can try Firebug or any other tool that allows you to analyze HTTP headers and check if the redirect really happens and whether the Location header is really present.

0

You should also verify that you are redirecting to a valid location, and that the location has proper 404 and 500 error messages/pages setup. It could be that you are simply redirecting a bad place.

0

Weird, but removing blank lines in php worked for me :-\

code before:

<?php

header("Location: http://www.website.com/");

?>

code that worked:

<?php header("Location: http://www.website.com/"); ?>
0

If your index page is a html file, it may not work. Change it to index.php and use this code:

<?php

header("Location: http://ea.tc");

?>
0

I actually had a case similar to this where I had an admin page that was included at the top of all my other pages. At the top of each page below the line:

<?php include '../../admin.php' ?>

I would have the php logic:

<?php if($_SESSION['username'] === null){ header("Location: ./adminLogin.php");}?>

The problem with this was that somewhere else I was also calling/manipulating the header(.... After a lot of time going through my code I admit I could not figure out where the problem was. Then I thought that each of these files hits my admin.php file before doing anything else. So I thought about what would happen if I would put the logic that was at the top of each of my views (because I didn't want anything to be visible unless you were logged in) into my admin.php file?

What happened was that before it even got to any of the php/html in my views it evaluated whether or not someone was logged in ($_SESSION['username'])) and if it was NULL then I just redirected to the adminLogin page. I put this logic right before my switch and it's worked perfectly for all my files that once required the logic. The way I had it worked in development, but posed a lot of issues in production. I found that moving the redirection logic to my admin.php file not only avoided the duplicate header(... manipulation but actually made my code more efficient by removing the excess logic from my view files and into my admin.php file.

Rather than putting the logic in every view file, put it in your controller once, before your switch. Works like a charm! This is useful if you don't want anyone to access any of the sensitive views unless they log in. In my case this was important for my CMS. However, if there are some files that you want to be viewable without logging in then I think the original logic would be sufficient. It seems like you already found a solution but hopefully this can be helpful if you run into this error again. :)

0

Had the same issue but for reloading. Was not reloading at all.

Fixed with this

echo "<script type='text/javascript'>location.reload();</script>"; exit;

I think it depends on the text editor used, encoding used, and windows or linux based php used, based on the other guys are commenting, could be many issues.

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