Session handling functionsSessions
&reftitle.intro;
Session support in PHP consists of a way to preserve certain data
across subsequent accesses. This enables you to build more
customized applications and increase the appeal of your web site.
If you are familiar with the session management of PHPLIB, you
will notice that some concepts are similar to PHP's session
support.
A visitor accessing your web site is assigned an unique id, the
so-called session id. This is either stored in a cookie on the
user side or is propagated in the URL.
The session support allows you to register arbitrary numbers of
variables to be preserved across requests. When a visitor accesses
your site, PHP will check automatically (if session.auto_start is
set to 1) or on your request (explicitly through
session_start or implicitly through
session_register) whether a specific session
id has been sent with the request. If this is the case, the prior
saved environment is recreated.
All registered variables are serialized after the request
finishes. Registered variables which are undefined are marked as
being not defined. On subsequent accesses, these are not defined
by the session module unless the user defines them later.
Session handling was added in PHP 4.0.
Sessions and security
Using sessions, does not mean, you can be absolutely sure, that
the session data can only be viewed by that user. This is important
to keep in mind, when storing and displaying sensitive
information. When storing data into a session, one should always
ask themselves, what the damage is, when somebody else views that
information, or how your application is affected when this session
is actually somebody else.
For instance, if somebody else takes a session, can he then post
a message in a forum, as that user and how big of a problem is
that? Or perhaps he can view what the original user was thinking
of ordering, because he gets access to that user's shopping cart.
Obviously for a flowershop, this is less dramatic, than for a
pharmacy.
Therefore, when dealing with sensitive information, there should
always be additional methods to decide whether it is a valid
session. Sessions are not reliable as a secure authentication
mechanism.
Sessions rely on the session ID, meaning one can 'steal' a
session, by stealing the session ID. This can be made harder, by
using a cookie specifically a session cookie, but does not in any
way make it impossible and still relies on the user closing all
browser windows, to expire the session cookie.
Besides that, even session cookies can be sniffed on a network or
logged by a proxyserver.
&reftitle.required;
&no.requirement;
&reftitle.install;
Session support is enabled in PHP by default. If you would
not like to build your PHP with session support, you should
specify the
option to configure.
&reftitle.runtime;
The session management system supports a number of configuration
options which you can place in your &php.ini; file. We will give a
short overview.
session.save_handler defines the name of the
handler which is used for storing and retrieving data
associated with a session. Defaults to
files.
session.save_path defines the argument which
is passed to the save handler. If you choose the default files
handler, this is the path where the files are created.
Defaults to /tmp. If
session.save_path's path depth is more than
2, garbage collection will not be performed.
If you leave this set to a world-readable directory, such as
/tmp (the default), other users on the
server may be able to hijack sessions by getting the list of
files in that directory.
session.name specifies the name of the
session which is used as cookie name. It should only contain
alphanumeric characters. Defaults to
PHPSESSID.
session.auto_start specifies whether the
session module starts a session automatically on request
startup. Defaults to 0 (disabled).
session.cookie_lifetime specifies the lifetime of
the cookie in seconds which is sent to the browser. The value 0
means "until the browser is closed." Defaults to
0.
session.serialize_handler defines the name
of the handler which is used to serialize/deserialize
data. Currently, a PHP internal format (name
php) and WDDX is supported (name
wddx). WDDX is only available, if PHP is
compiled with WDDX
support. Defaults to php.
session.gc_probability specifies the
probability that the gc (garbage collection) routine is started
on each request in percent. Defaults to 1.
session.gc_maxlifetime specifies the number
of seconds after which data will be seen as 'garbage' and
cleaned up.
If you are using the default file-based session handler, your
filesystem must keep track of access times (atime). Windows FAT does
not so you will have to come up with another way to handle garbage
collecting your session if you are stuck with a FAT filesystem or any
other fs where atime tracking is not available.
session.referer_check contains the
substring you want to check each HTTP Referer for. If the
Referer was sent by the client and the substring was not
found, the embedded session id will be marked as invalid.
Defaults to the empty string.
session.entropy_file gives a path to an
external resource (file) which will be used as an additional
entropy source in the session id creation process. Examples are
/dev/random or
/dev/urandom which are available on many
Unix systems.
session.entropy_length specifies the number
of bytes which will be read from the file specified
above. Defaults to 0 (disabled).
session.use_cookies specifies whether the
module will use cookies to store the session id on the client
side. Defaults to 1 (enabled).
session.use_only_cookies specifies whether
the module will only use
cookies to store the session id on the client side. Defaults
to 0 (disabled, for backward compatibility).
Enabling this setting prevents attacks involved passing session
ids in URLs. This setting was added in PHP
4.3.0.
session.cookie_path specifies path to set
in session_cookie. Defaults to /.
session.cookie_domain specifies domain to
set in session_cookie. Default is none at all.
session.cache_limiter specifies cache
control method to use for session pages
(none/nocache/private/private_no_expire/public). Defaults to
nocache.
session.cache_expire specifies time-to-live
for cached session pages in minutes, this has no effect for
nocache limiter. Defaults to 180.
session.use_trans_sid whether transparent
sid support is enabled or not. Defaults to
0 (disabled).
For PHP 4.1.2 or less, it is enabled by compiling with
--enable-trans-sid.
From PHP 4.2.0, trans-sid feature is always compiled.
URL based session management has additional security risks
compared to cookie based session management. Users may send
an URL that contains an active session ID to their friends by
email or users may save an URL that contains a session ID to
their bookmarks and access your site with the same session ID
always, for example.
url_rewriter.tags spefifies which html tags
are rewritten to include session id if transparent sid support
is enabled. Defaults to
a=href,area=href,frame=src,input=src,form=fakeentry
The track_vars and
register_globals
configuration settings influence how the session variables get
stored and restored.
As of PHP 4.0.3, track_vars is
always turned on.
&reftitle.resources;
&no.resource;
&reference.session.constants;
&reftitle.examples;
As of PHP 4.1.0, $_SESSION is available as
global variable just like $_POST,
$_GET, $_REQUEST and so on.
Not like $HTTP_SESSION_VARS,
$_SESSION is always global. Therefore,
global should not be used for
$_SESSION.
If track_vars is
enabled and register_globals
is disabled, only members of the global associative array
$HTTP_SESSION_VARS can be registered as session
variables. The restored session variables will only be available
in the array $HTTP_SESSION_VARS.
Registering a variable with track_vars
enabled
]]>
Use of $_SESSION (or
$HTTP_SESSION_VARS with PHP 4.0.6 or less) is
recommended for security and code readablity. With
$_SESSION or
$HTTP_SESSION_VARS, there is no need to use
session_register()/session_unregister()/session_is_registered()
functions. Users can access session variable like a normal
variable.
Registering a variable with $_SESSION.
]]>
Unregistering a variable with $_SESSION.
]]>
If register_globals
is enabled, then all global variables can be registered as session
variables and the session variables will be restored to
corresponding global variables. Since PHP must know which global
variables are registered as session variables, users must register
variables with session_register() function while
$HTTP_SESSION_VARS/$_SESSION
does not need to use session_register().
If you are using
$HTTP_SESSION_VARS/$_SESSION
and disable register_globals,
do not use session_register,
session_is_registered and
session_unregister.
If you enable register_globals,
session_unregister should be used since
session variables are registered as global variables when
session data is deserialized. Disabling register_globals
is recommended for both security and performance reason.
Registering a variable with register_globals
enabled
]]>
If both track_vars and
register_globals
are enabled, then the globals variables and the
$HTTP_SESSION_VARS/$_SESSION
entries will reference the same value for already registered
variables.
If user use session_register() to register session variable,
$HTTP_SESSION_VARS/$_SESSION
will not have these variable in array until it is loaded from
session storage. (i.e. until next request)
Passing the Session ID
There are two methods to propagate a session id:
Cookies
URL parameter
The session module supports both methods. Cookies are optimal, but
since they are not reliable (clients are not bound to accept
them), we cannot rely on them. The second method embeds the
session id directly into URLs.
PHP is capable of doing this transparently when compiled with
--enable-trans-sid. If you enable this option,
relative URIs will be changed to contain the session id
automatically. Alternatively, you can use the constant
SID which is defined, if the client did not
send the appropriate cookie. SID is either of
the form session_name=session_id or is an empty
string.
The arg_separator.output
&php.ini; directive allows to customize the argument seperator.
The following example demonstrates how to register a variable, and
how to link correctly to another page using SID.
Counting the number of hits of a single user
Hello visitor, you have seen this page times.
;
(=SID?> can be used if short tag is enabled)
# is necessary to preserve the session id
# in the case that the user has disabled cookies
?>
To continue, click here
]]>
The <?=SID?> is not necessary, if
--enable-trans-sid was used to compile PHP.
Non-relative URLs are assumed to point to external sites and
hence don't append the SID, as it would be a security risk to
leak the SID to a different server.
Custom Session Handlers
To implement database storage, or any other storage method, you
will need to use session_set_save_handler to
create a set of user-level storage functions.
&reference.session.functions;