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Is there a sort of php script which will run a series of URLs and then direct the user to the final destination? the use of this is: creating a checkout cart on a site that doesn't have a robust "wishlist" feature.

The script runs a series of "add item to cart" urls, and then the final destination takes the user to their cart of products i've picked out for them.

4 Answers 4

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Yes you can do this with ajax.

Use jQuery to do your ajax requests.

e.g

$.get("http://mywebsite.com/json/cart_add.php?pid=25");
$.get("http://mywebsite.com/json/cart_add.php?pid=27");

If you use sessions then it will be added to the current session providing it is on the same domain.

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  • That is slick. Is there a security issue to worry about? I can't think of any, but I am not necessarily the best at figuring them out.
    – MrChrister
    Dec 2, 2008 at 19:44
  • Not really, they would have to hi-jack your session id which should be fine if you NEVER pass it via the url.
    – Jay
    Dec 2, 2008 at 19:45
  • So as long as the cart_add.php was giving back good responses, no worries. This attack wouldn't apply because you can mitigate the response, right? haacked.com/archive/2008/11/20/…
    – MrChrister
    Dec 2, 2008 at 19:48
  • If your pages are protected against SQL injection on any REQUEST parameters (POST & GET) and you do NOT accept anything that allows another to hi-jack then it is no different from visiting the page in the address bar. You could also use an iframe for this but thats what ajax takes away the need for!
    – Jay
    Dec 2, 2008 at 19:51
  • Cool. Thank you. I am going to try your method in my project then. +1
    – MrChrister
    Dec 2, 2008 at 19:52
3

See http://php.net/curl

edit: As for managing remote sessions through cURL, it depends how the remote site tracks sessions. Some use cookies (which cURL supports), some generate a sessionid token that you have to pass back in subsequent requests, either as a parameter or in the http header.

The docs for PHP's cURL API are pretty sparse, so you may have to hunt for more complete tutorials. I found the following by Googling for "curl cookie tutorial":

http://coderscult.com/php/php-curl/2008/05/20/php-curl-cookies-example/

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  • How would this work - would you pass the user's session ID to curl? For a shopping cart the script needs to see the end-user's session data. By just using curl wouldn't a new session get created on every request, because it is requested from PHP and not the user's browser?
    – Tom Haigh
    Dec 5, 2008 at 16:14
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it really depends on specifics of your site.

if its oo, you may be able to call the relevant methods one after the other to add items to the basket? or you may be able to do this with includes?

or it may be that the site has some include files you can use?

or it may have a mechanism to redirect users after adding items to the basket that you can take advantage of?

or if not, there's other answers that have appeared whilst i was writing that suggest valid ways to achieve this with javascript or curl.

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ok i'm going to try the ajax suggestion but i'm not sure how the code is formatted with get and post. this is what i've started and it doesn't fetch the url(i swapped in generic urls for demonstration);

 <html>   
 <head>                                        
 <script type="text/javascript" src="jquery-1.2.6.min.js"></script>          
 <script type="text/javascript">      
 $(document).ready(function() {    
 $("a").click(function(){    
 $.get("http://www.store.com/item4");    
 $.get("http://www.store.com/item5");
 alert("Items Added, Now Redirecting");           
 });    
 });                                                         
 </script>                                                         
 </head>  
 <body>
 <a href="">Link</a>                                                                                               
 </body>                                                                        
 </html>
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  • What does the script you are targeting output after it adds the items to the cart?
    – MrChrister
    Dec 2, 2008 at 20:52
  • nothing, i added a post line and it didn't help $.get("store.com/item5"); $.post("store.com/cart.php");
    – mrtunes
    Dec 2, 2008 at 20:53
  • Put some outputting code in the script that adds items to the cart. Then use something like this $.get("store.com/item5", function(data){ alert("Data Loaded: " + data); }); To see your output from the page calling the $.get
    – MrChrister
    Dec 2, 2008 at 21:14
  • hmm, i gave that a shot to no avail. do you know if there's a working example of this sort of thing anywhere?
    – mrtunes
    Dec 2, 2008 at 23:28
  • you should access the urls you are trying directly to ensure there is not an error in your script. Also make sure you are debugging in Opera or Firefox because IE is awful for javascript debugging unless you have some particular tools installed.
    – Jay
    Dec 16, 2008 at 15:59

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