Re: condor_error
I think if you want to supress error messages and the whole page you could just go
<?php
ob_start();
function error_handler( ..... ){
ob_get_clean();
// possibly echo the message here
}
set_error_handler('error_handler');
?>
and optionally output the error. if it's fatal the last output will be sent.
ob_get_level
(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5)
ob_get_level — Return the nesting level of the output buffering mechanism
Description
int ob_get_level
( void
)
Returns the nesting level of the output buffering mechanism.
Return Values
Returns the level of nested output buffering handlers or zero if output buffering is not active.
ob_get_level
Anonymous
23-Dec-2007 04:42
23-Dec-2007 04:42
18-May-2005 08:45
Sometimes, ob_get_level() may be off by 1 because at the start of the script, it will return 1 even if ob_start() has never been called (and clearing the output buffer via ob_end_clean() and the like can be done without error). As a result, the first ob_start() will have an ob_get_level() of 2, the second will be 3, and so on.
I'm not sure if this is a PHP 5 thing or possibly because our server is set to gzip all html documents.
Also, up until at least PHP 5.0.4 (current version), ob_get_level() will always return 0 inside a destructor. This happens because the garbage collection for output buffers has already done before the destructor is called. If you want to do something with the output buffer from within an object before the script exits, using a callback function with ob_start() is the way to go.
bonzini at gnu dot org
07-Jul-2004 09:03
07-Jul-2004 09:03
Even under older PHP, you can decide if output buffering is active (i.e. ob_get_level() > 0) using
$ob_active = ob_get_length () !== FALSE
Paolo
tit dot petric at nospam dot telemach dot net
22-Jun-2002 12:01
22-Jun-2002 12:01
function condor_error($errno, $errstr, $errfile, $errline)
{
$errors = array(E_USER_ERROR, E_ERROR, E_PARSE);
if (in_array($errno,$errors)) {
while (ob_get_level()) {
ob_end_clean();
}
echo "<B>FATAL</B> [".$errno."] ".$errstr."<br>\n";
echo "Fatal error at line ".$errline." of file ".$errfile;
echo ", PHP ".PHP_VERSION." (".PHP_OS.")<br>\n";
echo "Aborting...<br><br>\n\n";
exit;
}
}
set_error_handler("condor_error");
in case you wanted to use a function to use for deleting all buffered output (to clearly display errors), you have it above
this eliminates the need for ob_end_clean_all() in php. good code :)
