User Membership With PHP

User Membership With PHP

Tutorial Details
  • Technology: PHP, CSS
  • Difficulty: Intermediate
  • Completion Time: 1-2 hours

A tutorial for the very beginners! No matter where you go on the internet, there’s a staple that you find almost everywhere – user registration. Whether you need your users to register for security or just for an added feature, there is no reason not to do it with this simple tutorial. In this tutorial we will go over the basics of user management, ending up with a simple Member Area that you can implement on your own website.


Introduction

In this tutorial we are going to go through each step of making a user management system, along with an inter-user private messaging system. We are going to do this using PHP, with a MySQL database for storing all of the user information. This tutorial is aimed at absolute beginners to PHP, so no prior knowledge at all is required – in fact, you may get a little bored if you are an experienced PHP user!

This tutorial is intended as a basic introduction to Sessions, and to using Databases in PHP. Although the end result of this tutorial may not immediately seem useful to you, the skills that you gain from this tutorial will allow you to go on to produce a membership system of your own; suiting your own needs.

Before you begin this tutorial, make sure you have on hand the following information:

  • Database Hostname – this is the server that your database is hosted on, in most situations this will simply be ‘localhost’.
  • Database Name, Database Username, Database Password – before starting this tutorial you should create a MySQL database if you have the ability, or have on hand the information for connecting to an existing database. This information is needed throughout the tutorial.

If you don’t have this information then your hosting provider should be able to provide this to you.

Now that we’ve got the formalitiies out of the way, let’s get started on the tutorial!


Step 1 - Initial Configuration

Setting up the database

As stated in the Introduction, you need a database to continue past this point in the tutorial. To begin with we are going to make a table in this database to store our user information.

The table that we need will store our user information; for our purposes we will use a simple table, but it would be easy to store more information in extra columns if that is what you need. In our system we need the following four columns:

  • UserID (Primary Key)
  • Username
  • Password
  • EmailAddress

In database terms, a Primary Key is the field which uniquely identifies the row. In this case, UserID will be our Primary Key. As we want this to increment each time a user registers, we will use the special MySQL option – auto_increment.

The SQL query to create our table is included below, and will usually be run in the ‘SQL’ tab of phpMyAdmin.

CREATE TABLE `users` (
`UserID` INT(25) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY ,
`Username` VARCHAR(65) NOT NULL ,
`Password` VARCHAR(32) NOT NULL ,
`EmailAddress` VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL
);

Creating a base file

In order to simplify the creation of our project, we are going to make a base file that we can include in each of the files we create. This file will contain the database connection information, along with certain configuration variables that will help us out along the way.

Start by creating a new file: base.php, and enter in it the following code:

<?php
session_start();

$dbhost = "localhost"; // this will ususally be 'localhost', but can sometimes differ
$dbname = "database"; // the name of the database that you are going to use for this project
$dbuser = "username"; // the username that you created, or were given, to access your database
$dbpass = "password"; // the password that you created, or were given, to access your database

mysql_connect($dbhost, $dbuser, $dbpass) or die("MySQL Error: " . mysql_error());
mysql_select_db($dbname) or die("MySQL Error: " . mysql_error());
?>

Let’s take a look at a few of those lines shall we? There’s a few functions here that we’ve used and not yet explained, so let’s have a look through them quickly and make sense of them — if you already understand the basics of PHP, you may want to skip past this explanation.

session_start();

This function starts a session for the new user, and later on in this tutorial we will store information in this session to allow us to recognise users who have already logged in. If a session has already been created, this function will recognise that and carry that session over to the next page.

mysql_connect($dbhost, $dbuser, $dbpass) or die("MySQL Error: " . mysql_error());
mysql_select_db($dbname) or die("MySQL Error: " . mysql_error());

Each of these functions performs a separate, but linked task. The mysql_connect function connects our script to the database server using the information we gave it above, and the mysql_select_db function then chooses which database to use with the script. If either of the functions fails to complete, the die function will automatically step in and stop the script from processing – leaving any users with the message that there was a MySQL Error.


Step 2 - Back to the Frontend

What do we need to do first?

The most important item on our page is the first line of PHP; this line will include the file that we created above (base.php), and will essentially allow us to access anything from that file in our current file. We will do this with the following line of of PHP code. Create a file named index.php, and place this code at the top.

<?php include "base.php"; ?>

Begin the HTML page

The first thing that we are going to do for our frontend is to create a page where users can enter their details to login, or if they are already logged in a page where they can choose what they then wish to do. In this tutorial I am presuming that users have basic knowledge of how HTML/CSS works, and therefore am not going to explain this code in detail; at the moment these elements will be unstyled, but we will be able to change this later when we create our CSS stylesheet.

Using the file that we have just created (index.php), enter the following HTML code below the line of PHP that we have already created.

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">  
<head>  
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />  
<title>User Management System (Tom Cameron for NetTuts)</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="style.css" type="text/css" />
</head>  
<body>  
<div id="main">

What shall we show them?

Before we output the rest of the page we have a few questions to ask ourselves:

  1. Is the user already logged in?
    • Yes – we need to show them a page with options for them to choose.
    • No – we continue onto the next question.
  2. Has the user already submitted their login details?
    • Yes – we need to check their details, and if correct we will log them into the site.
    • No – we continue onto the next question.
  3. If both of the above were answered No, we can now assume that we need to display a login form to the user.

These questions are in fact, the same questions that we are going to implement into our PHP code. We are going to do this in the form of if statements. Without entering anything into any of your new files, lets take a look at the logic that we are going to use first.

<?php
if(!empty($_SESSION['LoggedIn']) && !empty($_SESSION['Username']))
{
	// let the user access the main page
}
elseif(!empty($_POST['username']) && !empty($_POST['password']))
{
	// let the user login
}
else
{
	// display the login form
}
<?>

Looks confusing, doesn’t it? Let’s split it down into smaller sections and go over them one at a time.

if(!empty($_SESSION['LoggedIn']) && !empty($_SESSION['Username']))
{
	// let the user access the main page
}

When a user logs into our website, we are going to store their information in a session – at any point after this we can access that information in a special global PHP array – $_SESSION. We are using the empty function to check if the variable is empty, with the operator ! in front of it. Therefore we are saying:

If the variable $_SESSION['LoggedIn'] is not empty and $_SESSION['Username'] is not empty, execute this piece of code.

The next line works in the same fashion, only this time using the $_POST global array. This array contains any data that was sent from the login form that we will create later in this tutorial. The final line will only execute if neither of the previous statements are met; in this case we will display to the user a login form.

So, now that we understand the logic, let’s get some content in between those sections. In your index.php file, enter the following below what you already have.

<?php
if(!empty($_SESSION['LoggedIn']) && !empty($_SESSION['Username']))
{
	 ?>

	 <h1>Member Area</h1>
     <pThanks for logging in! You are <b><?=$_SESSION['Username']?></b> and your email address is <b><?=$_SESSION['EmailAddress']?></b>.</p>
     
     <?php
}
elseif(!empty($_POST['username']) && !empty($_POST['password']))
{
	$username = mysql_real_escape_string($_POST['username']);
    $password = md5(mysql_real_escape_string($_POST['password']));
    
	$checklogin = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM users WHERE Username = '".$username."' AND Password = '".$password."'");
    
    if(mysql_num_rows($checklogin) == 1)
    {
    	$row = mysql_fetch_array($checklogin);
        $email = $row['EmailAddress'];
        
        $_SESSION['Username'] = $username;
        $_SESSION['EmailAddress'] = $email;
        $_SESSION['LoggedIn'] = 1;
        
    	echo "<h1>Success</h1>";
        echo "<p>We are now redirecting you to the member area.</p>";
        echo "<meta http-equiv='refresh' content='=2;index.php' />";
    }
    else
    {
    	echo "<h1>Error</h1>";
        echo "<p>Sorry, your account could not be found. Please <a href=\"index.php\">click here to try again</a>.</p>";
    }
}
else
{
	?>
    
   <h1>Member Login</h1>
    
   <p>Thanks for visiting! Please either login below, or <a href="register.php">click here to register</a>.</p>
    
	<form method="post" action="index.php" name="loginform" id="loginform">
	<fieldset>
		<label for="username">Username:</label><input type="text" name="username" id="username" /><br />
		<label for="password">Password:</label><input type="password" name="password" id="password" /><br />
		<input type="submit" name="login" id="login" value="Login" />
	</fieldset>
	</form>
    
   <?php
}
?>

</div>
</body>
</html>

Hopefully, the first and last code blocks won’t confuse you too much. What we really need to get stuck into now is what you’ve all come to this tutorial for – the PHP code. We’re now going to through the second section one line at a time, and I’ll explain what each bit of code here is intended for.

	 $username = mysql_real_escape_string($_POST['username']);
    $password = md5(mysql_real_escape_string($_POST['password']));

There are two functions that need explaining for this. Firstly, mysql_real_escape_string – a very useful function to clean database input. It isn’t a failsafe measure, but this will keep out the majority of the malicious hackers out there by stripping unwanted parts of whatever has been put into our login form. Secondly, md5. It would be impossible to go into detail here, but this function simply encrypts whatever is passed to it – in this case the user’s password – to prevent prying eyes from reading it.

	 $checklogin = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM users WHERE Username = '".$username."' AND Password = '".$password."'");
    
    if(mysql_num_rows($checklogin) == 1)
    {
    	 $row = mysql_fetch_array($checklogin);
        $email = $row['EmailAddress'];
        
        $_SESSION['Username'] = $username;
        $_SESSION['EmailAddress'] = $email;
        $_SESSION['LoggedIn'] = 1;

Here we have the core of our login code; firstly, we run a query on our database. In this query we are searching for everything relating to a member, whose username and password match the values of our $username and $password that the user has provided. On the next line we have an if statement, in which we are checking how many results we have received – if there aren’t any results, this section won’t be processed. But if there is a result, we know that the user does exist, and so we are going to log them in.

The next two lines are to obtain the user’s email address. We already have this information from the query that we have already run, so we can easily access this information. First, we get an array of the data that has been retrieved from the database – in this case we are using the PHP function mysql_fetch_array. I have then assigned the value of the EmailAddress field to a variable for us to use later.

Now we set the session. We are storing the user’s username and email address in the session, along with a special value for us to know that they have been logged in using this form. After this is all said and done, they will then be redirect to the Member Area using the META REFRESH in the code.

So, what does our project currently look like to a user?

Great! It’s time to move on now, to making sure that people can actually get into your site.

Let the people signup

It’s all well and good having a login form on your site, but now we need to let user’s be able to use it – we need to make a login form. Make a file called register.php and put the following code into it.

<?php include "base.php"; ?>
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">  
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />  

<title>User Management System (Tom Cameron for NetTuts)</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="style.css" type="text/css" />
</head>  
<body>  
<div id="main">
<?php
if(!empty($_POST['username']) && !empty($_POST['password']))
{
	$username = mysql_real_escape_string($_POST['username']);
    $password = md5(mysql_real_escape_string($_POST['password']));
    $email = mysql_real_escape_string($_POST['email']);
    
	 $checkusername = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM users WHERE Username = '".$username."'");
     
     if(mysql_num_rows($checkusername) == 1)
     {
     	echo "<h1>Error</h1>";
        echo "<p>Sorry, that username is taken. Please go back and try again.</p>";
     }
     else
     {
     	$registerquery = mysql_query("INSERT INTO users (Username, Password, EmailAddress) VALUES('".$username."', '".$password."', '".$email."')");
        if($registerquery)
        {
        	echo "<h1>Success</h1>";
        	echo "<p>Your account was successfully created. Please <a href=\"index.php\">click here to login</a>.</p>";
        }
        else
        {
     		echo "<h1>Error</h1>";
        	echo "<p>Sorry, your registration failed. Please go back and try again.</p>";    
        }    	
     }
}
else
{
	?>
    
   <h1>Register</h1>
    
   <p>Please enter your details below to register.</p>
    
	<form method="post" action="register.php" name="registerform" id="registerform">
	<fieldset>
		<label for="username">Username:</label><input type="text" name="username" id="username" /><br />
		<label for="password">Password:</label><input type="password" name="password" id="password" /><br />
        <label for="email">Email Address:</label><input type="text" name="email" id="email" /><br />
		<input type="submit" name="register" id="register" value="Register" />
	</fieldset>
	</form>
    
    <?php
}
?>

</div>
</body>
</html>

So, there’s not much new PHP that we haven’t yet learnt in that section. Let’s just take a quick look at that SQL query though, and see if we can figure out what it’s doing.

$registerquery = mysql_query("INSERT INTO users (Username, Password, EmailAddress) VALUES('".$username."', '".$password."', '".$email."')");

So, here we are adding the user to our database. This time, instead of retrieving data we’re inserting it; so we’re specifying first what columns we are entering data into (don’t forget, our UserID will go up automatically). In the VALUES() area, we’re telling it what to put in each column; in this case our variables that came from the user’s input. So, let’s give it a try; once you’ve made an account on your brand-new registration form, here’s what you’ll see for the Member’s Area.

Make sure that they can logout

We’re almost at the end of this section, but there’s one more thing we need before we’re done here – a way for user’s to logout of their accounts. This is very easy to do (fortunately for us); create a new filed named logout.php and enter the following into it.

<?php include "base.php; $_SESSION = array(); session_destroy(); ?>
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;index.php">

In this we are first resetting our the global $_SESSION array, and then we are destroying the session entirely.

And that’s the end of that section, and the end of the PHP code. Let’s now move onto our final section.


Step 3 - Get Styled

I’m not going to explain much in this section – if you don’t understand HTML/CSS I would highly reccomend when of the many excellent tutorials on this website to get you started. Create a new file named style.css and enter the following into it; this will style all of the pages that we have created so far.

* {
	margin: 0;
    padding: 0;
}
body {
	font-family: Trebuchet MS;
}
a {
	color: #000;
}
a:hover, a:active, a:visited {
	text-decoration: none;
}
#main {
	width: 780px;
    margin: 0 auto;
	margin-top: 50px;
	padding: 10px;
    border: 1px solid #CCC;
    background-color: #EEE;
}
form fieldset {	border: 0; }
form fieldset p br { clear: left; }
label {
	margin-top: 5px;
    display: block;
    width: 100px;
    padding: 0;
    float: left;
}
input {
	font-family: Trebuchet MS;
    border: 1px solid #CCC;
	margin-bottom: 5px;
    background-color: #FFF;
    padding: 2px;
}
input:hover {
	border: 1px solid #222;
    background-color: #EEE;
}

Now let’s take a look at a few screenshots of what our final project should look like:

The login form.

The member area.

The registration form.

And finally…

And that’s it! You now have a members area that you can use on your site. I can see a lot of people shaking their heads and shouting at their monitors that that is no use to them – you’re right. But what I hope any beginners to PHP have learned is the basics of how to use a database, and how to use sessions to store information. The vital skills to creating any web application.

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  • http://www.47ideas.com/ Tom Cameron
    Author

    Sorry, the above comment was intended for Damon (not Adam)! :D

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  • Nick Brown

    Bahhhh, where were you 5 weeks ago when I set about learning this on my own!!!

    Good tutorial though.

  • http://www.schmidt2.com/projekte/login/ Max

    the meta-tag for refresh doesn’t work with safari – if you change it to

    echo “”;

    it works! you can also add a little javascript to force the browser to refresh. more here: http://www.metatab.de/meta_tags/refresh.htm

    and: a very good tut!!!

  • Prick

    I stopped reading after I saw HTML and PHP mixed together… Setting a bad example for beginners and giving them bad habits that reflect on the rest of us!

    Bah!

    • neil

      What!……HTML and PHP are MEAN’T to be mixed together. It’s completely valid!

  • http://www.aminahdesigns.com Mr. Haynes

    I love this tut…I am with Tom, it would be great to redirect or pull up content based on the user.

  • http://www.snaptortoise.com George Mandis

    Nice tutorial! My only thought is there should be some extra layer of security in setting your cookies to identify logged-in users. With a simple cookie editor it looks like someone could edit the “username” and “email” cookies to log in as someone else without a password.

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  • http://humanbagel.com Human Bagel

    Wonderful script!
    I love the simplicity :)

  • http://www.johnjosef.com John

    A better example would be a more appropriate approach to this. Your database functions should be wrapped in a class since PHP does not provide automatic support against injection attacks, and also, using a database class will inevitably make more sense. There are tons out there. Although not a huge deal, it is better practice to open a mysql connection when you actually need one (although you will get an error on mysql_real_escape_string if a connection is not started – and thus is why you should use a mysql class that wraps all this functionality together) because opening a connection is a rather time consuming process, and in certain instances or poor server configurations, can lead to connection pile-ups. Basically the idea follows as such: [write page code] -> [i need to access the database] [open connection] -> [execute queries] -> [close connection when the page is done]

    Also, I am not 100% sure on this, but I believe a better approach would be to unset($_SESSION) when you log out, if not for any actual programming reason, then for semantics.

  • http://probablysucks.com Dwayne from Probably Sucks Blog

    When I was starting out with PHP, a tutorial like this would have been extremely beneficial.

    Where the hell was this tutorial four years ago? I’ll tell you where it was, 4 years into the future (now). Pick up your game.

    Dwayne.
    http://probablysucks.com

  • Adam

    Can someone explain this for me?

  • http://bobby-marko.com Bobby Marko

    Maybe I’m missing something, but it appears that in the article the logout link is missing from the markup for the index.php file, it’s in the source though.

  • Jatin Meshiya

    Thanks a lot for guide so perfectly. thanks again. one more idea can you use ajax here and make it more powerfull!!? it will make your aforts more significant.

  • http://bobby-marko.com Bobby Marko

    Sorry for the double post, but I noticed two more errors in the script.
    1. In the code snippet for logout.php, the include is missing an end quote.
    Right now it looks like this: include “base.php;
    2. In the index.php code the redirect for successfully logging in has an extra equals sign:
    content=”=2;index.php”
    These errors are only in the article and not in the source files.

  • Danny

    Maybe a stupid question but is checking $_SESSION['LoggedIn'] and $_SESSION['Username'] really secure? Maybe I don’t understand how the session is created but it would seem like it would be easy to compromise both those values by guessing…

  • http://swapnilsarwe.phpnet.us/ Swapnil Sarwe

    Very nice beginners tutorial. Very well explained with simple language. Hope beginners find it useful and make it as a personal library and later on add more options on the way to their development.

    Thanx for the tuts.

  • http://indocomputer-indocomputer.blogspot.com ridwan

    thanx for the tut
    its gona help for the begginer….

  • George Lawrence

    Thanks …..
    It’s very useful.

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  • Sebastian

    Awesome tut!

    A followup with ajax and maybe some more security would be really nice!

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  • Adam

    Haha, my previous question was in regard to a meta tag that I copy and pasted but was stripped from my post. I looked it up on w3 so nevermind. Great tut!

  • http://www.codethirteen.com/ Paul

    A more object-oriented approach would have been of more benefit, but this is a simple and easy to follow beginners example.

    Sorry to be a pain, but you’ve made a couple of typos throughout the tutorial though, you might like to tidy them as it reflects on the site as a whole.

  • http://www.47ideas.com/ Tom Cameron
    Author

    @Paul: I only noticed one typo when I read through; but that doesn’t mean there aren’t others. I don’t have write access to the tutorial once it’s posted on this site, so they’ll have to stay I’m afraid :). I agree that OOP would be more beneficial in a real environment, but as I’ve stated lots of times in both the article and in my comments – this was always meant to be a tutorial for total beginners.

  • Paul

    What Paul said, an Object Oriented tutorial would have been better. (Weird how we both thought of the same thing and how are names are similar, lol)

  • http://rafyta.com Rafyta

    i found a few typos too, but nothing unfixable.
    it’s good that you kept it bare-bones, beginners will learn more

  • Alex Tayra

    Can anyone explain what means 25, 65, 32 and 255 in sql query and why?

  • http://www.47ideas.com/ Tom Cameron
    Author

    @Alex Tayra: Those are the maximum length of the value that can be stored in that field.

  • Jaco Sloof

    Nice tutorial, would love to see this being molded into a more object oriented framework, and have things like automatic verification email generation.

  • http://www.renderrobot.com Alex

    nettuts need to up there game in terms of proof reading code! or to start allowing authors to edit there own posts. last few tutorials i have done have all had errors in the posted code. Which is where i find it best to learn from, just copying and pasting the source files onto a server seems a bit pointless from a learning point of view! cmon nettuts sort it out!

  • http://www.renderrobot.com Alex

    p.s

    awesome tutorial! i learnt alot from this :)

  • Mila

    This is great! Now my problem is that I need to actually keep the files (PDFs) in this area away from non-members. How would I go about doing that?

    help!

  • http://www.dominicdeloso.com Dominic Deloso

    If I’m in the member’s area page, I can’t retrieve my username and email address to display, what’s wrong?.

    Please answer..

    tnx..

  • digitalgirl

    I am able to register a new user but anytime I login I get the error that the user cannot be found. I tried a few things and still I can’t authenticate?? Ideas?

  • christina

    What if you want to make it so if a certain user logs in then they will be directed to a certain page and only see certain things? Im trying to figure out how to do that now.. any ideas?!

  • http://www.eyesparks.com Pete

    members page isn’s displaying user and email. try replacing:

    with:

    and the same for the email.

  • Shaun

    @digitalgirl

    I am getting the same error! “Sorry, your account could not be found.”

    Although I am typing the details 100% correctly?!?

    Does anyone have any ideas?!?

  • http://www.Enari.se Enari

    well, i have the same problem…

    Pete, its hard to replace nothing whit nothing…

  • http://www.eyesparks.com Pete

    apologies, comments are blocking my code replace:
    ?=$_SESSION['Username']?

    with:
    ?php echo $_SESSION['Username']?

    this is on line 17 of index.php

  • http://www.dominicdeloso.com Dominic Deloso

    @Pete

    I stl can’t retrieve the data with your suggestion..

    any ideas how to solve this?

    tnx..

  • http://www.robindrost.nl Robin

    Thanks for this great tutorial.

    I am a real beginner with php, and this made alot clear.

    Thanks again!

  • KayRose

    Great tutorial, but is there anyone who could make a tutorial on making a website search feature using Mysql & PHP.

    So that you don’t have to use Google’s crappy search feature.

    Again i love the tutorial, it’s been very helpful in me making a small website template for users registering and being able to only view pages if their logged in.

  • Chris Bauer

    @ Mila

    I would also like to know how to keep files away from the public. Isn’t that the point of a member section?

  • Michael

    Great tutorial ! …but could someone please clarify the logout process as the logout link is missing (re Bobby Marko post)

  • fano

    You should maybe try your script in IE7, it gets really silly! loool!!!

  • Michael

    @fano – I’m testing on Mac (Firefox, Safari & Opera)…surely Tom Cameron had conducted some cross-platform testing before publishing this tutorial ???

    Has anyone else experienced the missing logout link on a Mac?

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  • asadev

    this is not secure.. why?

    $_SESSION['username'] = ‘nettuts’;
    $_SESSION['loged_in'] = 1;

    and you are in!

    it should be more like..

    $_SESSION['login_information'] = array(‘username’ => ‘nettuts’, ‘password = md5(md5(‘user_password’).md5(‘special chars thats no one know..’)));

    and you must check the information every time you view a secure page..

    correct me if i was wrong..