I understand that a session cookie can be given a lifetime (session.cookie_lifetime
) and that after that lifetime the cookie expires regardless of whether a user interacts with the site.
I would therefore assume to set this to 0 to indicate they should stay live until the browser closes.
I also think I understand that the garbage collection lifetime (session.gc_maxlifetime
) can be set for a cookie and that as long as a user does not exceed this time between their clicks then the cookie will remain active.
To test thi开发者_StackOverflow社区s out I've been trying to get a 10 second session timeout.
I tried:
ini_set('session.gc_maxlifetime',10);
but the session doesn't timeout after 1 minute at least.
Is this because I am only saying to the garbage collector that the session has a life of 10 seconds but I'm not actually triggering the garbage collector?
How do you set the garbage collector going or does it just run every time a session is requested?
First of all, don't confuse cookie settings (which are client-side) and garbage collection (which is server-side). Cookie settings only affect the expiration of the session_id. Session data may still exist on the server even if the browser has removed the cookie and, on the contrary, the server can remove the data while the session_id is still remembered by the browser.
The cookie can be set to expire when you close the browser or in a specific date and time (I believe the default option is the first one, but I'd have to check it). In both cases, if the user interacts with the site the cookie will remain valid since it's renewed on each response.
Session data is removed when the garbage collection is launched but you must take into account that:
The garbage collection is started randomly, triggered by a page request.
It removes session data not modified in more that gc_maxlifetime seconds.
By default, session data is stored in files and PHP doesn't track what site owns what files. That means that storing sessions in the default shared location makes you lose control on session expiration: the site that's configured to keep session data for the shortest time is likely to remove data from other sites with longer time.
To sum up, if you want full control on your data lifetime you need to store session data in a private directory, e.g.:
session_save_path('/home/foo/sessions');
ini_set('session.gc_maxlifetime', 3*60*60); // 3 hours
ini_set('session.use_only_cookies', TRUE);
session_start();
The server has a default timeout set in it's INI files, if not overridden from within a script. In apache it is set from within PHP.ini i believe. You also need to enable the garbage collection function, which I believe is also set in php.ini.
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