In general, security by obscurity is one of the weakest forms of security. But in some cases, every little bit of extra security is desirable.
A few simple techniques can help to hide PHP, possibly slowing down an attacker who is attempting to discover weaknesses in your system. By setting expose_php = off in your php.ini file, you reduce the amount of information available to them.
Another tactic is to configure web servers such as apache to parse different filetypes through PHP, either with an .htaccess directive, or in the apache configuration file itself. You can then use misleading file extensions:
Example 32-1. Hiding PHP as another language # Make PHP code look like other code types AddType application/x-httpd-php .asp .py .pl |
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Or obscure it completely:
Example 32-2. Using unknown types for PHP extensions # Make PHP code look like unknown types AddType application/x-httpd-php .bop .foo .133t |
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Or hide it as HTML code, which has a slight performance hit because all HTML will be parsed through the PHP engine:
Example 32-3. Using HTML types for PHP extensions # Make all PHP code look like HTML AddType application/x-httpd-php .htm .html |
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For this to work effectively, you must rename your PHP files with the above extensions. While it is a form of security through obscurity, it's a minor preventative measure with few drawbacks.
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