45

How to fix the session_register() deprecated problem in PHP 5.3

7 Answers 7

46

Don't use it. The description says:

Register one or more global variables with the current session.

Two things that came to my mind:

  1. Using global variables is not good anyway, find a way to avoid them.
  2. You can still set variables with $_SESSION['var'] = "value".

See also the warnings from the manual:

If you want your script to work regardless of register_globals, you need to instead use the $_SESSION array as $_SESSION entries are automatically registered. If your script uses session_register(), it will not work in environments where the PHP directive register_globals is disabled.

This is pretty important, because the register_globals directive is set to False by default!

Further:

This registers a global variable. If you want to register a session variable from within a function, you need to make sure to make it global using the global keyword or the $GLOBALS[] array, or use the special session arrays as noted below.

and

If you are using $_SESSION (or $HTTP_SESSION_VARS), do not use session_register(), session_is_registered(), and session_unregister().

0
28

Use $_SESSION directly to set variables. Like this:

$_SESSION['name'] = 'stack';

Instead of:

$name = 'stack';
session_register("name");

Read More Here

20

before PHP 5.3

session_register("name");

since PHP 5.3

$_SESSION['name'] = $name;
10

if you need a fallback function you could use this

function session_register($name){
    global $$name;
    $_SESSION[$name] = $$name;
    $$name = &$_SESSION[$name]; 
}
0

To complement Felix Kling's answer, I was studying a codebase that used to have the following code:

if (is_array($start_vars)) {
    foreach ($start_vars as $var) {
        session_register($var);
    }
} else if (!(empty($start_vars))) {
    session_register($start_vars);
}

In order to not use session_register they made the following adjustments:

if (is_array($start_vars)) {
    foreach ($start_vars as $var) {
        $_SESSION[$var] =  $GLOBALS[$var];
    }
} else if (!(empty($start_vars))) {
    $_SESSION[$start_vars] =  $GLOBALS[$start_vars];
}
0

I wrote myself a little wrapper, so I don't have to rewrite all of my code from the past decades, which emulates register_globals and the missing session functions.

I've picked up some ideas from different sources and put some own stuff to get a replacement for missing register_globals and missing session functions, so I don't have to rewrite all of my code from the past decades. The code also works with multidimensional arrays and builds globals from a session.

To get the code to work use auto_prepend_file on php.ini to specify the file containing the code below. E.g.: auto_prepend_file = /srv/www/php/.auto_prepend.php.inc

You should have runkit extension from PECL installed and the following entries on your php.ini:

extension_dir = <your extension dir>
extension = runkit.so
runkit.internal_override = On

.auto_prepend.php.inc:

<?php
//Fix for removed session functions
if (!function_exists('session_register'))
{
    function session_register()
    {
        $register_vars = func_get_args();
        foreach ($register_vars as $var_name)
        {
            $_SESSION[$var_name] = $GLOBALS[$var_name];
            if (!ini_get('register_globals'))
            {   $GLOBALS[$var_name] = &$_SESSION[$var_name]; }
        }
    }

    function session_is_registered($var_name)
    {   return isset($_SESSION[$var_name]); }

    function session_unregister($var_name)
    {   unset($_SESSION[$var_name]); }
}

//Fix for removed function register_globals
if (!isset($PXM_REG_GLOB))
{
    $PXM_REG_GLOB=1;
    if (!ini_get('register_globals'))
    {
        if (isset($_REQUEST))   { extract($_REQUEST); }
        if (isset($_SERVER))        { extract($_SERVER); }

        //$_SESSION globals must be registred with call of session_start()
        // Best option - Catch session_start call - Runkit extension from PECL must be present
        if (extension_loaded("runkit"))
        {
            if (!function_exists('session_start_default'))
            {   runkit_function_rename("session_start", "session_start_default"); }
            if (!function_exists('session_start'))
            {
                function session_start($options=null)
                {
                    $return=session_start_default($options);
                    if (isset($_SESSION))
                    {
                        $var_names=array_keys($_SESSION);
                        foreach($var_names as $var_name)
                        {   $GLOBALS[$var_name]=&$_SESSION[$var_name]; }
                    }
                    return $return;
                }
            }
        }
        // Second best option - Will always extract $_SESSION if session cookie is present.
        elseif ($_COOKIE["PHPSESSID"])
        {
            session_start();
            if (isset($_SESSION))
            {
                $var_names=array_keys($_SESSION);
                foreach($var_names as $var_name)
                {   $GLOBALS[$var_name]=&$_SESSION[$var_name]; }
            }
        }
    }
}
?>
-2

We just have to use @ in front of the deprecated function. No need to change anything as mentioned in above posts. For example: if(!@session_is_registered("username")){ }. Just put @ and problem is solved.

1
  • 3
    Just suppressing the errors is not a correct way to deal with deprecated functions. It's sometimes a quick hot-fix, but never a long-term solution (not even short-term!). Try to find out why it is marked as deprecated and what you can do against it!
    – Haudegen
    Aug 4, 2015 at 14:32

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.