NAME

CGI::Session - persistent session data in CGI applications

SYNOPSIS

# Object initialization:
use CGI::Session;
$session = new CGI::Session();

$CGISESSID = $session->id();

# send proper HTTP header with cookies:
print $session->header();

# storing data in the session
$session->param('f_name', 'Sherzod');
# or
$session->param(-name=>'l_name', -value=>'Ruzmetov');

# retrieving data
my $f_name = $session->param('f_name');
# or
my $l_name = $session->param(-name=>'l_name');

# clearing a certain session parameter
$session->clear(["l_name", "f_name"]);

# expire '_is_logged_in' flag after 10 idle minutes:
$session->expire('is_logged_in', '+10m')

# expire the session itself after 1 idle hour
$session->expire('+1h');

# delete the session for good
$session->delete();

DESCRIPTION

CGI-Session is a Perl5 library that provides an easy, reliable and modular session management system across HTTP requests. Persistency is a key feature for such applications as shopping carts, login/authentication routines, and application that need to carry data across HTTP requests. CGI::Session does that and many more.

TO LEARN MORE

Current manual is optimized to be used as a quick reference. To learn more both about the philosophy and CGI::Session programming style, consider the following:

  • CGI::Session::Tutorial - extended CGI::Session manual. Also includes library architecture and driver specifications.

  • We also provide mailing lists for CGI::Session users. To subscribe to the list or browse the archives visit https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/cgi-session-user

  • RFC 2965 - "HTTP State Management Mechanism" found at ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2965.txt

  • CGI - standard CGI library

  • Apache::Session - another fine alternative to CGI::Session.

METHODS

Following is the overview of all the available methods accessible via CGI::Session object.

new()
new( $sid )
new( $query )
new( $dsn, $query||$sid )
new( $dsn, $query||$sid, \%dsn_args )

Constructor. Returns new session object, or undef on failure. Error message is accessible through errstr() - class method. If called on an already initialized session will re-initialize the session based on already configured object. This is only useful after a call to load().

Can accept up to three arguments, $dsn - Data Source Name, $query||$sid - query object OR a string representing session id, and finally, \%dsn_args, arguments used by $dsn components.

If called without any arguments, $dsn defaults to driver:file;serializer:default;id:md5, $query||$sid defaults to CGI->new(), and \%dsn_args defaults to undef.

If called with a single argument, it will be treated either as $query object, or $sid, depending on its type. If argument is a string , new() will treat it as session id and will attempt to retrieve the session from data store. If it fails, will create a new session id, which will be accessible through id() method. If argument is an object, cookie() and param() methods will be called on that object to recover a potential $sid and retrieve it from data store. If it fails, new() will create a new session id, which will be accessible through id() method. $CGI::Session::NAME will define the name of the query parameter and/or cookie name to be requested, defaults to CGISESSID.

If called with two arguments first will be treated as $dsn, and second will be treated as $query or $sid or undef, depending on its type. Some examples of this syntax are:

$s = CGI::Session->new("driver:mysql", undef);
$s = CGI::Session->new("driver:sqlite", $sid);
$s = CGI::Session->new("driver:db_file", $query);
$s = CGI::Session->new("serializer:storable;id:incr", $sid);
# etc...

Following data source components are supported:

  • driver - CGI::Session driver. Available drivers are file, db_file, mysql and sqlite. Third party drivers are welcome. For driver specs consider CGI::Session::Driver

  • serializer - serializer to be used to encode the data structure before saving in the disk. Available serializers are storable, freezethaw and default. Default serializer will use Data::Dumper.

  • id - ID generator to use when new session is to be created. Available ID generator is md5

For example, to get CGI::Session store its data using DB_File and serialize data using FreezeThaw:

$s = new CGI::Session("driver:DB_File;serializer:FreezeThaw", undef);

If called with three arguments, first two will be treated as in the previous example, and third argument will be \%dsn_args, which will be passed to $dsn components (namely, driver, serializer and id generators) for initialization purposes. Since all the $dsn components must initialize to some default value, this third argument should not be required for most drivers to operate properly.

undef is acceptable as a valid placeholder to any of the above arguments, which will force default behavior.

load()
load($query||$sid)
load($dsn, $query||$sid)
load($dsn, $query, \%dsn_args);

Constructor. Usage is identical to new(), so is the return value. Major difference is, new() can create new session if it detects expired and non-existing sessions, but load() does not.

load() is useful to detect expired or non-existing sessions without forcing the library to create new sessions. So now you can do something like this:

$s = CGI::Session->load() or die CGI::Session->errstr();
if ( $s->is_expired ) {
    print $s->header(),
        $cgi->start_html(),
        $cgi->p("Your session timed out! Refresh the screen to start new session!")
        $cgi->end_html();
    exit(0);
}

if ( $s->is_empty ) {
    $s = $s->new() or die $s->errstr;
}

Notice, all expired sessions are empty, but not all empty sessions are expired!

id()

Returns effective ID for a session. Since effective ID and claimed ID can differ, valid session id should always be retrieved using this method.

param($name)
param(-name=>$name)

Used in either of the above syntax returns a session parameter set to $name or undef if it doesn't exist. If it's called on a deleted method param() will issue a warning but return value is not defined.

param($name, $value)
param(-name=>$name, -value=>$value)

Used in either of the above syntax assigns a new value to $name parameter, which can later be retrieved with previously introduced param() syntax. $value may be a scalar, arrayref or hashref.

Attempts to set parameter names that start with _SESSION_ will trigger a warning and undef will be returned.

param_hashref()

Deprecated. Use dataref() instead.

dataref()

Returns reference to session's data table:

$params = $s->dataref();
$sid = $params->{_SESSION_ID};
$name= $params->{name};
# etc...

Useful for having all session data in a hashref, but too risky to update.

save_param()
save_param($query)
save_param($query, \@list)

Saves query parameters to session object. In other words, it's the same as calling param($name, $value) for every single query parameter returned by $query->param(). The first argument, if present, should be either CGI object or any object which can provide param() method. If it's undef, defaults to the return value of query(), which returns CGI->new. If second argument is present and is a reference to an array, only those query parameters found in the array will be stored in the session. undef is a valid placeholder for any argument to force default behavior.

load_param()
load_param($query)
load_param($query, \@list)

Loads session parameters into a query object. The first argument, if present, should be query object, or any other object which can provide param() method. If second argument is present and is a reference to an array, only parameters found in that array will be loaded to the query object.

clear()
clear('field')
clear(\@list)

Clears parameters from the session object.

With no parameters, all fields are cleared. If passed a single parameter or a reference to an array, only the named parameters are cleared.

flush()

Synchronizes data in the buffer with its copy in disk. Normally it will be called for you just before the program terminates, or session object goes out of scope, so you should never have to flush() on your own.

atime()

Read-only method. Returns the last access time of the session in seconds from epoch. This time is used internally while auto-expiring sessions and/or session parameters.

ctime()

Read-only method. Returns the time when the session was first created in seconds from epoch.

expire()
expire($time)
expire($param, $time)

Sets expiration interval relative to atime().

If used with no arguments, returns the expiration interval if it was ever set. If no expiration was ever set, returns undef. For backwards compatibility, a method named etime() does the same thing.

Second form sets an expiration time. This value is checked when previously stored session is asked to be retrieved, and if its expiration interval has passed, it will be expunged from the disk immediately. Passing 0 cancels expiration.

By using the third syntax you can set the expiration interval for a particular session parameter, say ~logged-in. This would cause the library call clear() on the parameter when its time is up. Passing 0 cancels expiration.

All the time values should be given in the form of seconds. Following keywords are also supported for your convenience:

+-----------+---------------+
|   alias   |   meaning     |
+-----------+---------------+
|     s     |   Second      |
|     m     |   Minute      |
|     h     |   Hour        |
|     d     |   Day         |
|     w     |   Week        |
|     M     |   Month       |
|     y     |   Year        |
+-----------+---------------+

Examples:

$session->expire("2h");                # expires in two hours
$session->expire(0);                   # cancel expiration
$session->expire("~logged-in", "10m"); # expires '~logged-in' parameter after 10 idle minutes

Note: all the expiration times are relative to session's last access time, not to its creation time. To expire a session immediately, call delete(). To expire a specific session parameter immediately, call clear([$name]).

is_new()

Returns true only for a brand new session.

is_expired()

Tests whether session initialized using load() is to be expired. This method works only on sessions initialized with load():

$s = CGI::Session->load() or die CGI::Session->errstr;
if ( $s->is_expired ) {
    die "Your session expired. Please refresh";
}
if ( $s->is_empty ) {
    $s = $s->new() or die $s->errstr;
}
is_empty()

Returns true for sessions that are empty. It's preferred way of testing whether requested session was loaded successfully or not:

$s = CGI::Session->load($sid);
if ( $s->is_empty ) {
    $s = $s->new();
}

Actually, the above code is nothing but waste. The same effect could've been achieved by saying:

$s = CGI::Session->new( $sid );

is_empty() is useful only if you wanted to catch requests for expired sessions, and create new session afterwards. See is_expired() for an example.

delete()

Deletes a session from the data store and empties session data from memory, completely, so subsequent read/write requests on the same object will fail. Technically speaking, it will only set object's status to STATUS_DELETED and will trigger flush(), and flush() will do the actual removal.

find( \&code )
find( $dsn, \&code )
find( $dsn, \&code, \%dsn_args )

Experimental feature. Executes \&code for every session object stored in disk, passing initialized CGI::Session object as the first argument of \&code. Useful for housekeeping purposes, such as for removing expired sessions. Following line, for instance, will remove sessions already expired, but are still in disk:

CGI::Session->find( sub {} );

Notice, above \&code didn't have to do anything, because load(), which is called to initialize sessions inside find(), will automatically remove expired sessions. Following example will remove all the objects that are 10+ days old:

CGI::Session->find( \&purge );
sub purge {
    my ($session) = @_;
    next if $session->empty;    # <-- already expired?!
    if ( ($session->ctime + 3600*240) <= time() ) {
        $session->delete() or warn "couldn't remove " . $session->id . ": " . $session->errstr;
    }
}

Note: find() is meant to be convenient, not necessarily efficient. It's best suited in cron scripts.

MISCELLANEOUS METHODS

remote_addr()

Returns the remote address of the user who created the session for the first time. Returns undef if variable REMOTE_ADDR wasn't present in the environment when the session was created.

errstr()

Class method. Returns last error message from the library.

dump()

Returns a dump of the session object. Useful for debugging purposes only.

header()

Replacement for CGI.pm's header() method. Without this method, you usually need to create a CGI::Cookie object and send it as part of the HTTP header:

$cookie = CGI::Cookie->new(-name=>$session->name, -value=>$session->id);
print $cgi->header(-cookie=>$cookie);

You can minimize the above into:

print $session->header();

It will retrieve the name of the session cookie from $CGI::Session::NAME variable, which can also be accessed via CGI::Session->name() method. If you want to use a different name for your session cookie, do something like following before creating session object:

CGI::Session->name("MY_SID");
$session = new CGI::Session(undef, $cgi, \%attrs);

Now, $session->header() uses "MY_SID" as a name for the session cookie.

query()

Returns query object associated with current session object. Default query object class is CGI.pm.

DEPRECATED METHODS

These methods exist solely for for compatibility with CGI::Session 3.x.

close()

Closes the session. Using flush() is recommended instead, since that's exactly what a call to close() does now.

DISTRIBUTION

CGI::Session consists of several components such as drivers, serializers and id generators. This section lists what is available.

DRIVERS

Following drivers are included in the standard distribution:

  • file - default driver for storing session data in plain files. Full name: CGI::Session::Driver::file

  • db_file - for storing session data in BerkelyDB. Requires: DB_File. Full name: CGI::Session::Driver::db_file

  • mysql - for storing session data in MySQL tables. Requires DBI and DBD::mysql. Full name: CGI::Session::Driver::mysql

  • sqlite - for storing session data in SQLite. Requires DBI and DBD::SQLite. Full name: CGI::Session::Driver::sqlite

SERIALIZERS

ID GENERATORS

Following ID generators are available:

  • md5 - generates 32 character long hexadecimal string. Requires Digest::MD5. Full name: CGI::Session::ID::md5.

  • incr - generates incremental session ids.

  • static - generates static session ids. CGI::Session::ID::static

CREDITS

CGI::Session evolved to what it is today with the help of following developers. The list doesn't follow any strict order, but somewhat chronological. Specifics can be found in Changes file

Andy Lester <alester@flr.follett.com>
Brian King <mrbbking@mac.com>
Olivier Dragon <dragon@shadnet.shad.ca>
Adam Jacob <adam@sysadminsith.org>
Igor Plisco <igor@plisco.ru>
Mark Stosberg <markstos@cpan.org>
Matt LeBlanc
Shawn Sorichetti

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2001-2005 Sherzod Ruzmetov <sherzodr@cpan.org>. All rights reserved. This library is free software. You can modify and or distribute it under the same terms as Perl itself.

PUBLIC CODE REPOSITORY

You can see what the developers have been up to since the last release by checking out the code repository. You can browse the Subversion repository from here:

http://svn.cromedome.net/

Or check it directly with svn from here:

svn://svn.cromedome.net/CGI-Session

SUPPORT

If you need help using CGI::Session consider the mailing list. You can ask the list by sending your questions to cgi-session-user@lists.sourceforge.net .

You can subscribe to the mailing list at https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/cgi-session-user .

AUTHOR

Sherzod Ruzmetov <sherzodr@cpan.org>, http://author.handalak.com/

Mark Stosberg became a co-maintainer during the development of 4.0. markstos@cpan.org.

SEE ALSO

  • CGI::Session::Tutorial - extended CGI::Session manual

  • RFC 2965 - "HTTP State Management Mechanism" found at ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2965.txt

  • CGI - standard CGI library

  • Apache::Session - another fine alternative to CGI::Session