Reputation: 11696
This is more of an "understanding" question that a specific example. I'm coming from a Python/R/Scientific Computing background where I usually compile things or communicate through an interpreter. But everything is typically on the machine so there's no "communication" between server/client.
I'm now trying to learn PHP (in the hopes of letting users run my scripts from a web interface) and am curious what happens during a POST.
Consider the following script:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Form Testing</title>
<meta charset="utf-8"/>
</head>
<body>
<?php
if($_POST['formSubmit'] == "Submit") {
echo "Post Status is: ".$_POST['formSubmit']."\n";
$varMovie = $_GET['formMovie'];
echo "Your Favorite Movie Was: ".$varMovie;
}else{
echo "Post Status is: ".$_GET['formSubmit'] ."\n";
}
?>
<form action="index.php" method="post">
Which is your favorite movie?
<input type="text" name="formMovie" maxlength="50">
<input type="submit" name="formSubmit" value="Submit">
</form>
</body>
</html>
I get that the Submit button sends the equivalent of python dictionary (associative array?) to the next page. Then the command $_POST['formSubmit'] pulls up the value.
But where is the value in between when I hit the submit button to when the page loads. In other words, after the sumbit button, what actually happens? Clearly, the page must create this associative array somewhere and pass it somehow but I'm not sure how it does it.
The idea with a get seems more clear. The URL is appended so the PHP engine can read the URL string and find the values of all the variables (I'm assuming that's what happens yes)?
Thank you for your help!
Upvotes: 3
Views: 202
Reputation: 360922
HTTP GET
passes all its data via the url in a query string:
http://example.com/script.php?key=value
^^^^^^^^^^---GET query parameters
This could've been accomplished via:
<form method="GET" action="http://example.com/script.php"
<input type="hidden" name="key" value="value" />
<input type="submit" />
</form>
This URL becomes part of the HTTP request's headers:
GET /script.php?key=value HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
Header1: value1
Header2: value2
Cookie: something=whatever
A GET
request has no 'body' section - the entirety of the request is contained in the URL has the rest of the request's headers.
HTTP POST
can also have query parameters if need be, but generally anything submitted via POST operation sends the data in the HTTP requests "body" section:
POST /script.php?key=value HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
Header1: value1
Header2: value2
Cookie: something=whatever
foo=bar
And this would've been generated by the following form:
<form method="POST" action="/script.php?key=value" />
<input type="hidden" name="foo" value="bar" />
<input type="submit" />
</form>
Note the blank line between the headers and the key foo
. That line is how the webserver knows when the the headers are done and the body begins.
For this particular sample POSt request, you'd end up with:
$_GET['key'] = 'value'; // from the requested URL
$_POST['foo'] = 'bar'; // from the request body
There's also $_REQUEST
in PHP, which is an internal PHP-only construct that combines various sources, including $_GET and $_POST into a single monolithic data structure, but its data comes from the exactly same sources.
Upvotes: 4