strident.silence Posted June 17, 2012 Share Posted June 17, 2012 Hi, I'm doing my first serious website and I have some questions regarding best practices. I have some experience programming, but not much web programming / php. The project consist of a dynamic website managed by a custom CMS. There is no user input required other than the login to the CMS. 1. Login I was wondering if my method of managing login is correct. Only 3-4 users will have to login to the CMS. I have an authentification function: public static function authenticate($username, $password){ try { $dbh = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=myDB", $username, $password); $dbh = null; return 1; } catch(PDOException $e){ $dbh = null; return 0; } } If the connection does not generate an exception, I return 1 to a "loggedIn" variable(session). When the user is logged in, I use a generic user to do the queries(opening and closing the connection after each query). Is this viable? 2. Caching I cache all the website. The homepage in 1 file, and individual articles in separate files. If I add a news article for example, it will create a html file (news_2.html). When a user clicks on an article link, I just redirect to a page and include the html file in a <div>. The website won't be updated very often, so I think this will do the job? Quote Link to comment https://forums.phpfreaks.com/topic/264317-custom-cms-caching-and-login-questions/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
ignace Posted June 17, 2012 Share Posted June 17, 2012 public static function authenticate($username, $password){ try { $dbh = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=myDB", $username, $password); $dbh = null; return 1; } catch(PDOException $e){ $dbh = null; return 0; } } You should validate the user against a db table not as a db user. class Users { private $_pdo; public function __construct(PDO $driver) { $this->_pdo = $driver; } public function authenticate($user, $pass) { $sql = 'SELECT * FROM users WHERE username = ? AND password = ?'; $stmt = $this->_pdo->prepare($sql); $stmt->bindValue(0, $user); $stmt->bindValue(1, $pass); $stmt->execute(); return $stmt->rowCount() == 1 ? $stmt->fetch() : false; } } Quote Link to comment https://forums.phpfreaks.com/topic/264317-custom-cms-caching-and-login-questions/#findComment-1354553 Share on other sites More sharing options...
strident.silence Posted June 17, 2012 Author Share Posted June 17, 2012 Thanks for the reply. I did see that it is the usual way to do it, but I was wondering why. Is it more secure against bruteforce attacks? I know that with a lot of users it's just more logical to use a user table. Quote Link to comment https://forums.phpfreaks.com/topic/264317-custom-cms-caching-and-login-questions/#findComment-1354642 Share on other sites More sharing options...
ignace Posted June 17, 2012 Share Posted June 17, 2012 It's not the usual way, it's the only way. Visitors/users are something entirely different from DB users. DB users have access to your database, where a visitor/user has not. Quote Link to comment https://forums.phpfreaks.com/topic/264317-custom-cms-caching-and-login-questions/#findComment-1354652 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Adam Posted June 18, 2012 Share Posted June 18, 2012 When the user is logged in, I use a generic user to do the queries(opening and closing the connection after each query). You shouldn't close your connections in-between queries either. PHP has garbage collection built in, you don't need to manage it yourself. Why would you want to close it if you're going to perform another query anyway? You're just going to slow things down. Quote Link to comment https://forums.phpfreaks.com/topic/264317-custom-cms-caching-and-login-questions/#findComment-1354976 Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.