This section contains notes and hints specific to Sun Java System Web Server,
    Sun ONE Web Server, iPlanet and Netscape server installs of PHP on Windows.
   
    From PHP 4.3.3 on you can use PHP scripts with the
    NSAPI module to 
    generate custom
    directory listings and error pages. Additional functions for
    Apache compatibility are also available. For support in current webservers
    read the note about
    subrequests.
   
     To install PHP as a CGI handler, do the following:
    
- 
       Copy php4ts.dll to your systemroot
       (the directory where you installed Windows)
       
- 
       Make a file association from the command line.
       Type the following two lines:
        | assoc .php=PHPScript
ftype PHPScript=c:\php\php.exe %1 %* |  
 
- 
       In the Netscape Enterprise Administration Server create
       a dummy shellcgi directory and remove it just after (this
       step creates 5 important lines in obj.conf and allow the
       web server to handle shellcgi scripts).
       
- 
       In the Netscape Enterprise Administration Server create
       a new mime type (Category: type,
       Content-Type: magnus-internal/shellcgi, File Suffix:php).
       
- 
       Do it for each web server instance you want PHP to run
       
     More details about setting up
     PHP as a CGI executable can be found here:
     http://benoit.noss.free.fr/php/install-php.html
    
     To install PHP with NSAPI, do the following:
    
- 
       Copy php4ts.dll to your systemroot
       (the directory where you installed Windows)
       
- 
       Make a file association from the command line.
       Type the following two lines:
        | assoc .php=PHPScript
ftype PHPScript=c:\php\php.exe %1 %* |  
 
- 
       In the Netscape Enterprise Administration Server create
       a new mime type (Category: type,
       Content-Type: magnus-internal/x-httpd-php, File Suffix: php).
       
- 
        Edit magnus.conf (for servers >= 6) or
        obj.conf (for servers < 6) and add the following:
        You should
        place the lines after mime types init.
        | Init fn="load-modules" funcs="php4_init,php4_execute,php4_auth_trans" shlib="c:/php/sapi/php4nsapi.dll"
Init fn="php4_init" LateInit="yes" errorString="Failed to initialise PHP!" [php_ini="c:/path/to/php.ini"] |  
 (PHP >= 4.3.3) The php_ini parameter is
       optional but with it you can place your
       php.ini in your webserver config directory.
- 
       Configure the default object in obj.conf
       (for virtual server classes [Sun Web Server 6.0+] in
       their vserver.obj.conf):
       In the <Object name="default">
       section, place this line necessarily after all 'ObjectType'
       and before all 'AddLog' lines:
        | Service fn="php4_execute" type="magnus-internal/x-httpd-php" [inikey=value inikey=value ...] |  
 (PHP >= 4.3.3) As additional parameters you can add some special
       php.ini-values, for example you
       can set a docroot="/path/to/docroot"
       specific to the context php4_execute
       is called. For boolean ini-keys please use 0/1 as value,
       not "On","Off",...
       (this will not work correctly), e.g.
       zlib.output_compression=1 instead of
       zlib.output_compression="On"
- 
       This is only needed if you want to configure a directory that only consists of
       PHP scripts (same like a cgi-bin directory):
        | <Object name="x-httpd-php">
ObjectType fn="force-type" type="magnus-internal/x-httpd-php"
Service fn=php4_execute [inikey=value inikey=value ...]
</Object> |  
 After that you can configure a directory in the Administration server and assign it
       the style x-httpd-php. All files in it will get executed as PHP.
       This is nice to hide PHP usage by renaming files to .html.
- 
       Restart your web service and apply changes
       
- 
       Do it for each web server instance you want PHP to run
       
Note: 
      The stacksize that PHP uses depends on the configuration of the webserver. If you get
      crashes with very large PHP scripts, it is recommended to raise it with the Admin Server
      (in the section "MAGNUS EDITOR").
     
     Important when writing PHP scripts is the fact that Sun JSWS/Sun ONE
     WS/iPlanet/Netscape is a multithreaded web server. Because of that all
     requests are running in the same process space (the space of the webserver
     itself) and this space has only one environment. If you want to get CGI
     variables like PATH_INFO, HTTP_HOST
     etc. it is not the correct way to try this in the old PHP 3.x way with
     getenv() or a similar way (register globals to
     environment, $_ENV). You would only get the environment
     of the running webserver without any valid CGI variables!
    
Note: 
      Why are there (invalid) CGI variables in the environment?
     
      Answer: This is because you started the webserver process from the admin server
      which runs the startup script of the webserver, you wanted to start, as a CGI script
      (a CGI script inside of the admin server!). This is why the environment of
      the started webserver has some CGI environment variables in it. You can test
      this by starting the webserver not from the administration server. Use
      the command line as root user and start it manually - you will see
      there are no CGI-like environment variables.
     
     Simply change your scripts to get CGI variables in the correct way for
     PHP 4.x by using the superglobal $_SERVER. If you have
     older scripts which use $HTTP_HOST, etc., you should turn
     on register_globals in php.ini and change the variable
     order too (important: remove "E" from it,
     because you do not need the environment here):
     
| variables_order = "GPCS"
register_globals = On | 
    
     You can use PHP to generate the error pages for "404 Not Found"
     or similar. Add the following line to the object in obj.conf for
     every error page you want to overwrite:
     
| Error fn="php4_execute" code=XXX script="/path/to/script.php" [inikey=value inikey=value...] | 
     where 
XXX is the HTTP error code. Please delete
     any other 
Error directives which could interfere with yours.
     If you want to place a page for all errors that could exist, leave
     the 
code parameter out. Your script can get the HTTP status code
     with 
$_SERVER['ERROR_TYPE'].
    
     Another possibility is to generate self-made directory listings.
     Just create a PHP script which displays a directory listing and
     replace the corresponding default Service line for
     type="magnus-internal/directory"
     in obj.conf with the following:
     
| Service fn="php4_execute" type="magnus-internal/directory" script="/path/to/script.php" [inikey=value inikey=value...] | 
     For both error and directory listing pages the original URI and
     translated URI are in the variables 
$_SERVER['PATH_INFO'] and
     
$_SERVER['PATH_TRANSLATED'].
    
     The NSAPI module now supports the nsapi_virtual() function
     (alias: virtual())
     to make subrequests on the webserver and insert the result in the webpage.
     The problem is, that this function uses some undocumented features from
     the NSAPI library.
    
     Under Unix this is not a problem, because the module automatically looks
     for the needed functions and uses them if available.
     If not, nsapi_virtual() is disabled.
    
     Under Windows limitations in the DLL handling need the use of a automatic
     detection of the most recent ns-httpdXX.dll file.
     This is tested for servers till version 6.1. If a newer version of the
     Sun server is used, the detection fails and nsapi_virtual()
     is disabled.
    
     If this is the case, try the following:
     Add the following parameter to php4_init in
     magnus.conf/obj.conf:
     
| Init fn=php4_init ... server_lib="ns-httpdXX.dll" | 
     where 
XX is the correct DLL version number.
     To get it, look in the server-root for the correct DLL name. The
     DLL with the biggest filesize is the right one.
    
     You can check the status by using the phpinfo() function.