Take me over?
NAME
Catalyst::Plugin::Session - Generic Session plugin - ties together server side storage and client side tickets required to maintain session data.
SYNOPSIS
use Catalyst qw/Session Session::Store::FastMmap Session::State::Cookie/;
sub add_item : Local {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
my $item_id = $c->req->param("item");
# $c->session is stored across requests, so
# other actions will see these values
push @{ $c->session->{items} }, $item_id;
$c->forward("MyView");
}
sub display_items : Local {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
# values in $c->session are restored
$c->stash->{items_to_display} =
[ map { MyModel->retrieve($_) } @{ $c->session->{items} } ];
$c->forward("MyView");
}
DESCRIPTION
The Session plugin is the base of two related parts of functionality required for session management in web applications.
The first part, the State, is getting the browser to repeat back a session key, so that the web application can identify the client and logically string several requests together into a session.
The second part, the Store, deals with the actual storage of information about the client. This data is stored so that the it may be revived for every request made by the same client.
This plugin links the two pieces together.
METHODS
- sessionid
-
An accessor for the session ID value.
- session
-
Returns a hash reference that might contain unserialized values from previous requests in the same session, and whose modified value will be saved for future requests.
This method will automatically create a new session and session ID if none exists.
- session_delete_reason
-
This accessor contains a string with the reason a session was deleted. Possible values include:
address mismatch
session expired
- setup
-
This method is extended to also make calls to
check_session_plugin_requirements
andsetup_session
. - check_session_plugin_requirements
-
This method ensures that a State and a Store plugin are also in use by the application.
- setup_session
-
This method populates
$c->config->{session}
with the default values listed in "CONFIGURATION". - prepare_action
-
This methoid is extended, and will restore session data and check it for validity if a session id is defined. It assumes that the State plugin will populate the
sessionid
key beforehand. - finalize
-
This method is extended and will extend the expiry time, as well as persist the session data if a session exists.
- delete_session REASON
-
This method is used to invalidate a session. It takes an optional parameter which will be saved in
session_delete_reason
if provided. - initialize_session_data
-
This method will initialize the internal structure of the session, and is called by the
session
method if appropriate. - generate_session_id
-
This method will return a string that can be used as a session ID. It is supposed to be a reasonably random string with enough bits to prevent collision. It basically takes
session_hash_seed
and hashes it using SHA-1, MD5 or SHA-256, depending on the availibility of these modules. - session_hash_seed
-
This method is actually rather internal to generate_session_id, but should be overridable in case you want to provide more random data.
Currently it returns a concatenated string which contains:
A counter
The current time
One value from
rand
.The stringified value of a newly allocated hash reference
The stringified value of the Catalyst context object
In the hopes that those combined values are entropic enough for most uses. If this is not the case you can replace
session_hash_seed
with e.g.sub session_hash_seed { open my $fh, "<", "/dev/random"; read $fh, my $bytes, 20; close $fh; return $bytes; }
Or even more directly, replace
generate_session_id
:sub generate_session_id { open my $fh, "<", "/dev/random"; read $fh, my $bytes, 20; close $fh; return unpack("H*", $bytes); }
Also have a look at Crypt::Random and the various openssl bindings - these modules provide APIs for cryptographically secure random data.
- dump_these
-
See "dump_these" in Catalyst - ammends the session data structure to the list of dumped objects if session ID is defined.
USING SESSIONS DURING PREPARE
The earliest point in time at which you may use the session data is after Catalyst::Plugin::Session's prepare_action
has finished.
State plugins must set $c->session ID before prepare_action
, and during prepare_action
Catalyst::Plugin::Session will actually load the data from the store.
sub prepare_action {
my $c = shift;
# don't touch $c->session yet!
$c->NEXT::prepare_action( @_ );
$c->session; # this is OK
$c->sessionid; # this is also OK
}
CONFIGURATION
$c->config->{session} = {
expires => 1234,
};
All configuation parameters are provided in a hash reference under the session
key in the configuration hash.
- expires
-
The time-to-live of each session, expressed in seconds. Defaults to 7200 (two hours).
- verify_address
-
When false,
$c->request->address
will be checked at prepare time. If it is not the same as the address that initiated the session, the session is deleted.
SPECIAL KEYS
The hash reference returned by $c->session
contains several keys which are automatically set:
- __expires
-
A timestamp whose value is the last second when the session is still valid. If a session is restored, and __expires is less than the current time, the session is deleted.
- __updated
-
The last time a session was saved. This is the value of
$c->{session}{__expires} - $c->config->{session}{expires}
. - __created
-
The time when the session was first created.
- __address
-
The value of
$c->request->address
at the time the session was created. This value is only populated ofverify_address
is true in the configuration.
CAVEATS
verify_address
could make your site inaccessible to users who are behind load balanced proxies. Some ISPs may give a different IP to each request by the same client due to this type of proxying. If addresses are verified these users' sessions cannot persist.
To let these users access your site you can either disable address verification as a whole, or provide a checkbox in the login dialog that tells the server that it's OK for the address of the client to change. When the server sees that this box is checked it should delete the __address
sepcial key from the session hash when the hash is first created.
AUTHORS
Andy Grundman Christian Hansen Yuval Kogman, nothingmuch@woobling.org
Sebastian Riedel
COPYRIGHT & LICNESE
Copyright (c) 2005 the aforementioned authors. All rights
reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.