I know in PHP, it sends the X-Powered-By
header to have the PHP version.
I also know by appending some checksums, you can get access to PHP\'s credits,
In PHP, headers aren't sent until PHP encounters its first output statement.
This includes anything before the first <?php
.
This is also why setcookie sends throws a warning if you try to use it after something has been output:
Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /path/to/php/file.php:100) in /path/to/php/file.php on line 150
Note that none of this applies if output buffering is in use, as the output will not be sent until the appropriate output buffering command is run.
You can set expose_php = Off
in your php.ini if you don't want it to send X-Powered-By header.
PHP first compiles everything (including which headers have which values ) and then start the output, not vice-versa.
PHP is also detectable with its own easter eggs, you can read about this topic here : PHP Easter Eggs
See Apache Tips & Tricks: Hide PHP version (X-Powered-By)
Ups… As we can see PHP adds its own banner:
X-Powered-By: PHP/5.1.2-1+b1…
Let’s see how we can disable it. In order to prevent PHP from exposing the fact that it is installed on the server, by adding its signature to the web server header we need to locate in php.ini the variable
expose_php
and turn itoff
.By default
expose_php
is set to On.In your php.ini (based on your Linux distribution this can be found in various places, like /etc/php.ini, /etc/php5/apache2/php.ini, etc.) locate the line containing
expose_php On
and set it to Off:expose_php = Off
After making this change PHP will no longer add it’s signature to the web server header. Doing this, will not make your server more secure… it will just prevent remote hosts to easily see that you have PHP installed on the system and what version you are running.
To get rid of the X-Powered-By header without having access to php.ini, simply add an empty header.
<?php header('X-Powered-By:'); ?>
This overwrites the default X-Powered-By header with an empty value an though most clients and applications act like this header was not sent at all.
As noticed before, this must be inserted into the code before any output is sent.
And to answer your question:
Only your X-Powered-By header will be sent because it gets replaced by your header with the same name. So it can't be detected by a 'sniffer'.
Headers are "collected" by PHP before being sent back to the browser, so that you can override things like the status header. The way to test it is go to a command prompt, and type:
telnet www.yoursite.com 80
GET /index.php HTTP/1.1
[ENTER]
[ENTER]
And you'll see the headers that are sent in the response (replace /index.php with the URL of your PHP page after the domain.)
My question is, will this send the previous PHP header first (before it reaches my
header()
, and is it detectable by any sniffer program? Or are headers 'collected' by PHP, before being sent back to the browser?
No, it does not send the previous PHP header first. Headers are either sent or not sent (in complete, as one batch) in PHP. By default your headerDocs call replaces a previous header with the same name (unless you specify something different with the second parameter).
Note: If PHP would not collect the headers, it would not be able to replace one.
As it does not sent it earlier, it is not detectable with a sniffer program.
So yes, headers are collected by PHP and are send the moment "the real" output starts (HTTP response body).
See as well headers_sentDocs.