How to return an HTTP 500 code on any error, no matter what

Jake  picture Jake · Jun 16, 2010 · Viewed 83k times · Source

I'm writing an authentication script in PHP, to be called as an API, that needs to return 200only in the case that it approves the request, and403(Forbidden) or500` otherwise.

The problem I'm running into is that php returns 200 in the case of error conditions, outputting the error as html instead. How can I make absolutely sure that php will return an HTTP 500 code unless I explicitly return the HTTP 200 or HTTP 403 myself? In other words, I want to turn any and all warning or error conditions into 500s, no exceptions, so that the default case is rejecting the authentication request, and the exception is approving it with a 200 code.

I've fiddled with set_error_handler() and error_reporting(), but so far no luck. For example, if the code outputs something before I send the HTTP response code, PHP naturally reports that you can't modify header information after outputting anything. However, this is reported by PHP as a 200 response code with html explaining the problem. I need even this kind of thing to be turned into a 500 code.

Is this possible in PHP? Or do I need to do this at a higher level like using mod_rewrite somehow? If that's the case, any idea how I'd set that up?

Answer

BoltClock picture BoltClock · Jun 16, 2010

Simply send the status code as a response header():

header('HTTP/1.1 500 Internal Server Error');

Remember that when sending this there must not be any output before it. That means no echo calls and no HTML or whitespace.