{
"$type": "site.standard.document",
"bskyPostRef": {
"cid": "bafyreiergzkclfgsn54j5jvtefl4lr4mjwdbzwe2z6eoeaj335xh3bkc6e",
"uri": "at://did:plc:qfsyszxhq5agxsg2n5zo4lno/app.bsky.feed.post/3mgzvx3sxyko2"
},
"path": "/t/website-has-been-fine-for-months-but-now-shows-a-is-this-outage-related/118000#post_12",
"publishedAt": "2026-03-14T13:15:40.000Z",
"site": "https://forum.infinityfree.com",
"tags": [
"Http error 500",
"Websites and PHP"
],
"textContent": "When I check your site, I see both the `?>` content, but also that the status code of the request is 500. This suggests that not only do you only see that content, the underlying PHP code also crashed.\n\nOne thing you can do is enable error messages. That should give you an actual error message which will probably help in figuring out what’s going on.\n\nHttp error 500 Websites and PHP\n\n> When trying to access your website, you may see a page which returns the status code “500”. In Google Chrome, you’ll see a page with the error code HTTP ERROR 500. There are typically two reasons which can cause this error: The PHP code has crashed. The .htaccess file contains invalid rules. Here are some things you can try to debug and fix this. Fixing crashing PHP code A HTTP ERROR 500 simply tells you that the PHP code has crashed, but gives no information as to why it has crashed. Gett…",
"title": "Website has been fine for months but now shows a <?. Is this outage related?"
}