NAME
PHP::Session::DB - read / write PHP sessions stored in data bases
SYNOPSIS
use PHP::Session::DB;
my $session = PHP::Session::DB->new($id, { DBUSER => $dbuser, DBPASSWD => $dbpasswd, DBNAME => $dbname });
# session id
my $id = $session->id;
# get/set session data
my $foo = $session->get('foo');
$session->set(bar => $bar);
# remove session data
$session->unregister('foo');
# remove all session data
$session->unset;
# check if data is registered
$session->is_registered('bar');
# save session data
$session->save;
# destroy session
$session->destroy;
# create a new session, if not existent
$session = PHP::Session->new($new_sid, { %dbvars, create => 1 });
DESCRIPTION
PHP::Session::DB provides a way to read / write PHP4 sessions stored on databases, with which you can make your Perl application session shared with PHP4.
OPTIONS
Constructor new
takes some options as hashref.
- DBTYPE
-
this is the type of database that will be used. It must be a valid DBI driver. default: mysql.
- DBNAME
-
this is the database name that will store the sessions table. This is a mandatory argument
- DBTABLE
-
this is the table that stores the sessions data. default: sessions.
- DBUSER
-
this is the username that will be used to connect to the data base. This is a mandatory argument
- DBPASSWD
-
DBUSER password. This is a mandatory argument
- DBHOST
-
Database host. default: localhost.
- DBPORT
-
Database port. default: 3306 (mysql default port).
- serialize_handler
-
type of serialization handler. Currently only PHP default serialization is supported.
- create
-
whether to create session file, if it's not existent yet. default: 0
- auto_save
-
whether to save modification to session file automatically. default: 0
Consider cases like this:
my $session = PHP::Session->new($sid, { auto_save => 1 }); $session->set(foo => 'bar'); # Oops, you forgot save() method!
If you set
auto_save
to true value and when you forget to callsave
method after parameter modification, this module would save session file automatically when session object goes out of scope.If you set it to 0 (default) and turn warnings on, this module would give you a warning like:
PHP::Session: some keys are changed but not modified.
EXAMPLE
use strict;
use PHP::Session::DB;
use CGI::Lite;
my $session_name = 'PHPSESSID'; # change this if needed
print "Content-type: text/plain\n\n";
my $cgi = new CGI::Lite;
my $cookies = $cgi->parse_cookies;
if ($cookies->{$session_name}) {
my $session = PHP::Session->new($cookies->{$session_name}, {DBUSER => 'uname, DBPASSWD => '123', DBNAME => 'dunno');
# now, try to print uid variable from PHP session
print "uid:",Dumper($session->get('uid'));
} else {
print "can't find session cookie $session_name";
}
NOTES
If you are using PHP::Session and want to swith to PHP::Session::DB, the only thing you need to change is the way you call the
new
method. It is necessary that you add theDB
arguments (at least DBUSER, DBPASSWD and DBNAME) in order to get the module work properly.Array in PHP is hash in Perl.
Objects in PHP are restored as objects blessed into PHP::Session::Object (Null class) and original class name is stored in
_class
key.Locking when save()ing data is acquired via exclusive
flock
, same as PHP implementation.I have tested PHP::Session::DB only in MySQL databases, but you should not have any kind of problem to get it work with another databases. If you have any problem just send me an email.
TODO
Testing in databases such as PostgreSQL, Oracle, MSQL and others.
AUTHOR
Roberto Alamos Moreno <ralamosm@cpan.org>
based on PHP::Session written by
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa <miyagawa@bulknews.net>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
PHP::Session, Apache::Session::PHP, WDDX, Apache::Session, CGI::kSession