2013-02-10 31 views
0

當我將下面的代碼包含到我的wordpress頁面(我創建的允許用戶註冊一個單獨的服務)時,它強制頁面顯示空白,不包括標題。無論如何,沒有錯誤被拋出。當我在我的wordpress頁面中包含我的PDO樣式註冊時,它顯示空白

<?php 

// First we execute our common code to connection to the database and start the session 
require("includeinall.php"); 

// This if statement checks to determine whether the registration form has been submitted 
// If it has, then the registration code is run, otherwise the form is displayed 
if (!empty($_POST)) { 
    // Ensure that the user has entered a non-empty username 
    if (empty($_POST['username'])) { 
     // Note that die() is generally a terrible way of handling user errors 
     // like this. It is much better to display the error with the form 
     // and allow the user to correct their mistake. However, that is an 
     // exercise for you to implement yourself. 
     die("Please enter a username."); 
    } 

    // Ensure that the user has entered a non-empty password 
    if (empty($_POST['password'])) { 
     die("Please enter a password."); 
    } 

    // Make sure the user entered a valid E-Mail address 
    // filter_var is a useful PHP function for validating form input, see: 
    // http://us.php.net/manual/en/function.filter-var.php 
    // http://us.php.net/manual/en/filter.filters.php 
    if (!filter_var($_POST['email'], FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL)) { 
     die("Invalid E-Mail Address"); 
    } 

    // We will use this SQL query to see whether the username entered by the 
    // user is already in use. A SELECT query is used to retrieve data from the database. 
    // :username is a special token, we will substitute a real value in its place when 
    // we execute the query. 
    $query = " 
      SELECT 
       1 
      FROM members 
      WHERE 
       username = :username 
     "; 

    // This contains the definitions for any special tokens that we place in 
    // our SQL query. In this case, we are defining a value for the token 
    // :username. It is possible to insert $_POST['username'] directly into 
    // your $query string; however doing so is very insecure and opens your 
    // code up to SQL injection exploits. Using tokens prevents this. 
    // For more information on SQL injections, see Wikipedia: 
    // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_Injection 
    $query_params = array(
     ':username' => $_POST['username'] 
    ); 

    try { 
     // These two statements run the query against your database table. 
     $stmt = $db->prepare($query); 
     $result = $stmt->execute($query_params); 
    } 
    catch (PDOException $ex) { 
     // Note: On a production website, you should not output $ex->getMessage(). 
     // It may provide an attacker with helpful information about your code. 
     die("Failed to run query: " . $ex->getMessage()); 
    } 

    // The fetch() method returns an array representing the "next" row from 
    // the selected results, or false if there are no more rows to fetch. 
    $row = $stmt->fetch(); 

    // If a row was returned, then we know a matching username was found in 
    // the database already and we should not allow the user to continue. 
    if ($row) { 
     die("This username is already in use"); 
    } 

    // Now we perform the same type of check for the email address, in order 
    // to ensure that it is unique. 
    $query = " 
      SELECT 
       1 
      FROM members 
      WHERE 
       email = :email 
     "; 

    $query_params = array(
     ':email' => $_POST['email'] 
    ); 

    try { 
     $stmt = $db->prepare($query); 
     $result = $stmt->execute($query_params); 
    } 
    catch (PDOException $ex) { 
     die("Failed to run query: " . $ex->getMessage()); 
    } 

    $row = $stmt->fetch(); 

    if ($row) { 
     die("This email address is already registered"); 
    } 

    // An INSERT query is used to add new rows to a database table. 
    // Again, we are using special tokens (technically called parameters) to 
    // protect against SQL injection attacks. 
    $query = " 
      INSERT INTO members (
       username, 
       password, 
       email, 
       points, 
       memip, 
       completed_surveys, 
       salt 
      ) VALUES (
       :username, 
       :password, 
       :email 
       :points 
       :memip 
       :completed_surveys 
       :salt 
      ) 
     "; 

    // A salt is randomly generated here to protect again brute force attacks 
    // and rainbow table attacks. The following statement generates a hex 
    // representation of an 8 byte salt. Representing this in hex provides 
    // no additional security, but makes it easier for humans to read. 
    // For more information: 
    // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_%28cryptography%29 
    // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brute-force_attack 
    // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainbow_table 
    $salt = dechex(mt_rand(0, 2147483647)) . dechex(mt_rand(0, 2147483647)); 

    // This hashes the password with the salt so that it can be stored securely 
    // in your database. The output of this next statement is a 64 byte hex 
    // string representing the 32 byte sha256 hash of the password. The original 
    // password cannot be recovered from the hash. For more information: 
    // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptographic_hash_function 
    $password = hash('sha256', $_POST['password'] . $salt); 

    // Next we hash the hash value 65536 more times. The purpose of this is to 
    // protect against brute force attacks. Now an attacker must compute the hash 65537 
    // times for each guess they make against a password, whereas if the password 
    // were hashed only once the attacker would have been able to make 65537 different 
    // guesses in the same amount of time instead of only one. 
    for ($round = 0; $round < 65536; $round++) { 
     $password = hash('sha256', $password . $salt); 
    } 

    // Here we prepare our tokens for insertion into the SQL query. We do not 
    // store the original password; only the hashed version of it. We do store 
    // the salt (in its plaintext form; this is not a security risk). 
    $query_params = array(
     ':username' => $_POST['username'], 
     ':password' => $password, 
     ':email' => $_POST['email'], 
     ':points' => $bonuspoints, 
     ':memip' => $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'], 
     ':completed_surveys' => 0, 
     ':salt' => $salt 
    ); 

    try { 
     // Execute the query to create the user 
     $stmt = $db->prepare($query); 
     $result = $stmt->execute($query_params); 
    } 
    catch (PDOException $ex) { 
     // Note: On a production website, you should not output $ex->getMessage(). 
     // It may provide an attacker with helpful information about your code. 
     die("Failed to run query: " . $ex->getMessage()); 
    } 

    // This redirects the user back to the login page after they register 
    header("Location: login.php"); 

    // Calling die or exit after performing a redirect using the header function 
    // is critical. The rest of your PHP script will continue to execute and 
    // will be sent to the user if you do not die or exit. 
    die("Redirecting to login.php"); 
} 

?> 
<h1>Register</h1> 
<form action="register.php" method="post"> 
    Username:<br /> 
    <input type="text" name="username" value="" /> 
    <br /><br /> 
    E-Mail:<br /> 
    <input type="text" name="email" value="" /> 
    <br /><br /> 
    Password:<br /> 
    <input type="password" name="password" value="" /> 
    <br /><br /> 
    <input type="submit" value="Register" /> 
</form> 

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