Hansen [mailto:hansen.r...@live.com.au]
Sent: Tuesday, May 17, 2011 11:16 PM
To: php-general@lists.php.net
Subject: RE: [PHP] Session question
Unless your adding more code to your included file it isn't worth having it
as an include as there is more typing/text involved. For management pur
Tue, 17 May 2011 13:01:19 +0200
> To: php-general@lists.php.net
> Subject: Re: [PHP] Session question
>
> Paul Halliday wrote:
>
> > Is it OK to have session_start as an include?
> >
>
> Yes.
>
>
>
> --
> Per Jessen, Zürich (18.1°C)
>
Paul Halliday wrote:
> Is it OK to have session_start as an include?
>
Yes.
--
Per Jessen, Zürich (18.1°C)
--
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To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Alain Roger wrote:
the index.php page is the first page where user should logon.
it consists of 3 flags (english, french and slovak).
when use click on 1 flags, it reload the "index.php" page and changes the
login and password words by their relative translation into the flag
country
selected.
the index.php page is the first page where user should logon.
it consists of 3 flags (english, french and slovak).
when use click on 1 flags, it reload the "index.php" page and changes the
login and password words by their relative translation into the flag country
selected.
if user click on LOGO
On Tue, 7 Dec 2004 11:50:58 -0500, Josh Howe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've looked at the php session documentation, and it doesn't look like
> there's any way to run code when a session expires. I'd like to do some
> cleanup when a user's session expires, is there any way to trap this?
> Thanks
session_destroy() I'm pretty sure, from what I've read.
Jake McHenry
Nittany Travel MIS Coordinator
http://www.nittanytravel.com
> -Original Message-
> From: Frank Tudor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2003 8:47 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [PHP] session q
On 16-Jun-2003 Matt Palermo wrote:
> When a session is started on my server, it gets a name in the
> "sessiondata" folder like:
>
> sess_8sjg4893m9d0j43847dk4o5l2
>
>
> I was just wondering if all sessions on ANY server start with "sess_"?
> Is this a PHP-wide default, or can it be changed (
Register globals essentially takes the value of $_SESSION['foo'] and creates
$foo. It does the same thing for GET, POST, COOKIES, etc.
The problem here is that you have no way of telling if $foo was a POST
variable, GET, SESSION, or whatever. So, I can choose to append ?admin=1 to
one of your UR
> SInce register_globals() is ON on my server, I need to be able to
> figure out a way to ensure session security.
The single most important thing to do is initialize all your variables. The
way to ensure that you have done that is to set the error reporting level to
"E_ALL" (which is max). The
where register_globals is disabled.
"
-Oorspronkelijk bericht-
Van: Pushpinder Singh Garcha [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Verzonden: Wednesday, May 28, 2003 6:18 PM
Aan: Ernest E Vogelsinger
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Onderwerp: Re: [PHP] Session Question
Hello Ernest,
SInce register_globals(
Hello Ernest,
SInce register_globals() is ON on my server, I need to be able to
figure out a way to ensure session security.
Another question I had was that, with register_globals() ON can I
still use the $_SESSION to set my variables ? I want to avoid recoding
the entire application, so I wan
Hi,
A session is meant to exist on one domain... You could pass the session to
another domain to *hold* for you:
secure
checkout
Then the secure domain would be responsible for remembering the old session
id, and passing it back to your site when finished...
Essentially, I think that each dom
I use both... and the way I see PHP handling it is like this...
First call in it will add the SESSID to the hrefs.
Next call (page load) if it finds the cookie it will not append SESSID to URL.
However if it doesn't it will.
There are a few instance were I need to get the SESSION ID and append
Sorry I didn't make myself more clear. I only want to use server side
sessions. I don't want to have to rely on a client having cookies enabled
in their browser. So far having trans_sid is just doing the trick. I can
save values into sessions server side and not explicitly create a client
side co
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Does php use cookies for sessions even if you don't explicitly use
cookie
functions to save session data server side?
--
That question doesn't even make sense to me -- cookie functions can't save
dat
In most cases, Yes. Calling session_start() for the first time sets a
cookie on the client's computer containing the session id. At the same time
the function creates a matching session file on the server. You register
whatever variables you want to this file so that when you call
session_start
> > Just be sure you call session_start() on any page you want to access
> > session variables.
> >
>
> I have to call this function on each page I use session variable or juste
> once ?
The statement is pretty clear. You've to call it once on each page you want
to access session variables.
>
>
> Just be sure you call session_start() on any page you want to access
> session variables.
>
I have to call this function on each page I use session variable or juste
once ?
> This assumes the latest version of PHP. The procedure is similar on
> older versions, you just have to use session_reg
Just be sure you call session_start() on any page you want to access
session variables.
Then you can set a variable by doing
$_SESSION["myvariable"] = "hello";
and then you can use $_SESSION["myvariable"] anywhere you want.
This assumes the latest version of PHP. The procedure is similar on
You may want to check out something like auto_prepend_file. Look at the
PHP configuration help.
I was thinking that you may be able to include your class definition there
- IF auto_prepend_file IS INCLUDED BEFORE session.auto_start starts the
session.
Otherwise, use auto_prepend_file to incl
> Warning:
> fopen("/home/tgmalone/sessn-log/0bbaf33ab1c1f9d714e2244459979ec7.txt","a") -
> Permission denied in /home/tgmalone/public_html/index.php on line 17
>
> The problem is obvious, but I've been searching, searching and wracking my
> inadequate brain for a solution and can't find one - can
Thanks Christopher!
I chmoded the directory to 777 like you said, and it worked fine, but then I
took your advice regarding security and put all the data in a MySQL
database. Thank you very much for your help!
Tom Malone
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Tom Malone pressed the little lettered thingies in this order...
> I'm new to Apache (and PHP) and was unable to find anything approaching an
> answer to this problem in the Apache documentation. In fact, I'm not even
> sure if I'm having a problem with Apache or with PHP. I am trying to use
> se
Derick,
If you're seriously looking at thousands of concurent users
(let alone
millions) and the kind of budget on hardware and comms that
implies,
then I'd suggest you seriously look at your own session
solution with MySQL or
whatever.
You can perfectly easily just use your own authentication
lf
(i mean are the built in functions pretty effieicnt)? That is my primary
concern because of the # of usersthanks again!
-derick
- Original Message -
From: "Peter Dudley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2001 8:47 AM
Subject:
There is a useful article here:
http://phpbuilder.com/columns/ying2602.php3?page=1
As to "up to a million users" logged in at once... don't you wantto have
multiple redundant web servers running under a load balancer? If the rest
of your system can handle that many concurrent users, then I d
Are you opening a session on each of the pages you want to use the
variables?
Calling session_register() I believe causes an implicit opening of the
session, but on the other pages you have to explicity open the session, or
you won't have access to those vars.
- John Vanderbeck
- Admin, GameDesi
First use session_register(). Then give the variable a value.
So just rearrange your code, like this:
That should do it.
--
Plutarck
Should be working on something...
...but forgot what it was.
"Jan Grafström" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]..
> index.php where they log in from
> session_start(); file://first line of file
Okay.
> ?>
>
>
> Username
? You been typing too much XML?... :-)
Shouldn't hurt.
> Password />
>
>
> code from main.php
> session_register();
Register what? You're supposed to register a variable
some comments on sessions
- $PHPSESSID will only be set after the first page refresh.
- SID will only be set if your not using cookies.
- sessions with not transfer across multiple domain names.
- sessions without cookies will not transfer accross full urls.
use this code and
- sessions will
Hi Mark!
On Wed, 31 Jan 2001, Mark Green wrote:
> How about this:
>
> session_start();
> session_register($funky_session_var);
> $funky_session_var ++;
> print $funky_session_var;
the order doesn't matter (as it did in PHPLib sessions).
If it doesn't work I guess it's because you have regis
How about this:
session_start();
session_register($funky_session_var);
$funky_session_var ++;
print $funky_session_var;
Cheers,
^^@rk
Peter Van Dijck wrote:
>
> Hi,
> help: shouldn't this increase the number every time you reload the page?
>
> session_start();
> $funky_session_var ++;
>
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