############## Session Driver ############## The Session class permits you maintain a user's "state" and track their activity while they browse your site. CodeIgniter offers two default session drivers: the classic `Cookie Driver`_, and the `Native Driver`_, which supports usage of the native PHP Session mechanism. In addition, you may create your own `Custom Drivers`_ to store session data however you wish, while still taking advantage of the features of the Session class. Initializing a Session ====================== Sessions will typically run globally with each page load, so the session class must either be :doc:`initialized <../general/drivers>` in your :doc:`controller <../general/controllers>` constructors, or it can be :doc:`auto-loaded <../general/autoloader>` by the system. For the most part the session class will run unattended in the background, so simply initializing the class will cause it to read, create, and update sessions. To initialize the Session class manually in your controller constructor, use the $this->load->driver function:: $this->load->driver('session'); Once loaded, the Sessions library object will be available using: $this->session How do Sessions work? ===================== When a page is loaded, the session class will check to see if valid session data exists in the user's session. If sessions data does **not** exist (or if it has expired) a new session will be created and saved. If a session does exist, its information will be updated. With each update, the session_id will be regenerated. It's important for you to understand that once initialized, the Session class runs automatically. There is nothing you need to do to cause the above behavior to happen. You can, as you'll see below, work with session data or even add your own data to a user's session, but the process of reading, writing, and updating a session is automatic. What is Session Data? ===================== A *session*, as far as CodeIgniter is concerned, is simply an array containing the following information: - The user's unique Session ID (this is a statistically random string with very strong entropy, hashed with MD5 for portability, and regenerated (by default) every five minutes) - The user's IP Address - The user's User Agent data (the first 120 characters of the browser data string) - The "last activity" time stamp. The above data is stored in a cookie as a serialized array with this prototype:: [array] ( 'session_id' => random hash, 'ip_address' => 'string - user IP address', 'user_agent' => 'string - user agent data', 'last_activity' => timestamp ) .. note:: Sessions are only updated every five minutes by default to reduce processor load. If you repeatedly reload a page you'll notice that the "last activity" time only updates if five minutes or more has passed since the last time the cookie was written. This time is configurable by changing the $config['sess_time_to_update'] line in your system/config/config.php file. Retrieving Session Data ======================= Any piece of information from the session array is available using the following function:: $this->session->userdata('item'); Where item is the array index corresponding to the item you wish to fetch. For example, to fetch the session ID you will do this:: $session_id = $this->session->userdata('session_id'); .. note:: The function returns NULL if the item you are trying to access does not exist. Adding Custom Session Data ========================== A useful aspect of the session array is that you can add your own data to it and it will be stored in the user's cookie. Why would you want to do this? Here's one example: Let's say a particular user logs into your site. Once authenticated, you could add their username and email address to the session, making that data globally available to you without having to run a database query when you need it. To add your data to the session array involves passing an array containing your new data to this function:: $this->session->set_userdata($array); Where $array is an associative array containing your new data. Here's an example:: $newdata = array( 'username' => 'johndoe', 'email' => 'johndoe@some-site.com', 'logged_in' => TRUE ); $this->session->set_userdata($newdata); If you want to add userdata one value at a time, set_userdata() also supports this syntax. :: $this->session->set_userdata('some_name', 'some_value'); If you want to verify that a userdata value exists, call has_userdata(). :: $this->session->has_userdata('some_name'); Retrieving All Session Data =========================== An array of all userdata can be retrieved as follows:: $this->session->all_userdata() And returns an associative array like the following:: Array ( [session_id] => 4a5a5dca22728fb0a84364eeb405b601 [ip_address] => 127.0.0.1 [user_agent] => Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X 10_6_7; [last_activity] => 1303142623 ) Removing Session Data ===================== Just as set_userdata() can be used to add information into a session, unset_userdata() can be used to remove it, by passing the session key. For example, if you wanted to remove 'some_name' from your session information:: $this->session->unset_userdata('some_name'); This function can also be passed an associative array of items to unset. :: $array_items = array('username' => '', 'email' => ''); $this->session->unset_userdata($array_items); Flashdata ========= CodeIgniter supports "flashdata", or session data that will only be available for the next server request, and are then automatically cleared. These can be very useful, and are typically used for informational or status messages (for example: "record 2 deleted"). .. note:: Flash variables are prefaced with "flash\_" so avoid this prefix in your own session names. To add flashdata:: $this->session->set_flashdata('item', 'value'); You can also pass an array to set_flashdata(), in the same manner as set_userdata(). To read a flashdata variable:: $this->session->flashdata('item'); An array of all flashdata can be retrieved as follows:: $this->session->all_flashdata(); If you find that you need to preserve a flashdata variable through an additional request, you can do so using the keep_flashdata() function. You can either pass a single item or an array of flashdata items to keep. :: $this->session->keep_flashdata('item'); $this->session->keep_flashdata(array('item1', 'item2', 'item3')); Tempdata ======== CodeIgniter also supports "tempdata", or session data with a specific expiration time. After the value expires, or the session expires or is deleted, the value is automatically removed. To add tempdata:: $expire = 300; // Expire in 5 minutes $this->session->set_tempdata('item', 'value', $expire); You can also pass an array to set_tempdata():: $tempdata = array('newuser' => TRUE, 'message' => 'Thanks for joining!'); $this->session->set_tempdata($tempdata, '', $expire); .. note:: If the expiration is omitted or set to 0, the default expiration of 5 minutes will be used. To read a tempdata variable:: $this->session->tempdata('item'); If you need to remove a tempdata value before it expires, use unset_tempdata():: $this->session->unset_tempdata('item'); Destroying a Session ==================== To clear the current session:: $this->session->sess_destroy(); .. note:: This function should be the last one called, and even flash variables will no longer be available. If you only want some items destroyed and not all, use unset_userdata(). Session Preferences =================== You'll find the following Session related preferences in your application/config/config.php file: =========================== =============== =========================== ========================================================================== Preference Default Options Description =========================== =============== =========================== ========================================================================== **sess_driver** cookie cookie/native/*custom* The initial session driver to load. **sess_valid_drivers** cookie, native None Additional valid drivers which may be loaded. **sess_cookie_name** ci_session None The name you want the session cookie saved as (data for Cookie driver or session ID for Native driver). **sess_expiration** 7200 None The number of seconds you would like the session to last. The default value is 2 hours (7200 seconds). If you would like a non-expiring session set the value to zero: 0 **sess_expire_on_close** FALSE TRUE/FALSE (boolean) Whether to cause the session to expire automatically when the browser window is closed. **sess_encrypt_cookie** FALSE TRUE/FALSE (boolean) Whether to encrypt the session data (Cookie driver only). **sess_use_database** FALSE TRUE/FALSE (boolean) Whether to save the session data to a database. You must create the table before enabling this option (Cookie driver only). **sess_table_name** ci_sessions Any valid SQL table name The name of the session database table (Cookie driver only). **sess_time_to_update** 300 Time in seconds This options controls how often the session class will regenerate itself and create a new session id. **sess_match_ip** FALSE TRUE/FALSE (boolean) Whether to match the user's IP address when reading the session data. Note that some ISPs dynamically changes the IP, so if you want a non-expiring session you will likely set this to FALSE. **sess_match_useragent** TRUE TRUE/FALSE (boolean) Whether to match the User Agent when reading the session data. =========================== =============== =========================== ========================================================================== In addition to the values above, the cookie and native drivers apply the following configuration values shared by the :doc:`Input <input>` and :doc:`Security <security>` classes: =========================== =============== ========================================================================== Preference Default Description =========================== =============== ========================================================================== **cookie_prefix** '' Set a cookie name prefix in order to avoid name collisions **cookie_domain** '' The domain for which the session is applicable **cookie_path** / The path to which the session is applicable =========================== =============== ========================================================================== Session Drivers =============== By default, the `Cookie Driver`_ is loaded when a session is initialized. However, any valid driver may be selected with the $config['sess_driver'] line in your config.php file. The session driver library comes with the cookie and native drivers installed, and `Custom Drivers`_ may also be installed by the user. Typically, only one driver will be used at a time, but CodeIgniter does support loading multiple drivers. If a specific valid driver is called, it will be automatically loaded. Or, an additional driver may be explicitly loaded by calling load_driver():: $this->session->load_driver('native'); The Session library keeps track of the most recently selected driver to call for driver methods. Normally, session class methods are called directly on the parent class, as illustrated above. However, any methods called through a specific driver will select that driver before invoking the parent method. So, alternation between multiple drivers can be achieved by specifying which driver to use for each call:: $this->session->native->set_userdata('foo', 'bar'); $this->session->cookie->userdata('foo'); $this->session->native->unset_userdata('foo'); Notice in the previous example that the *native* userdata value 'foo' would be set to 'bar', which would NOT be returned by the call for the *cookie* userdata 'foo', nor would the *cookie* value be unset by the call to unset the *native* 'foo' value. The drivers maintain independent sets of values, regardless of key names. A specific driver may also be explicitly selected for use by pursuant methods with the select_driver() call:: $this->session->select_driver('native'); $this->session->userdata('item'); // Uses the native driver Cookie Driver ------------- The Cookie driver stores session information for each user as serialized (and optionally encrypted) data in a cookie. It can also store the session data in a database table for added security, as this permits the session ID in the user's cookie to be matched against the stored session ID. By default only the cookie is saved. If you choose to use the database option you'll need to create the session table as indicated below. If you have the encryption option enabled, the serialized array will be encrypted before being stored in the cookie, making the data highly secure and impervious to being read or altered by someone. More info regarding encryption can be :doc:`found here <encryption>`, although the Session class will take care of initializing and encrypting the data automatically. .. note:: Even if you are not using encrypted sessions, you must set an :doc:`encryption key <./encryption>` in your config file which is used to aid in preventing session data manipulation. .. note:: Cookies can only hold 4KB of data, so be careful not to exceed the capacity. The encryption process in particular produces a longer data string than the original so keep careful track of how much data you are storing. Saving Session Data to a Database ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ While the session data array stored in the user's cookie contains a Session ID, unless you store session data in a database there is no way to validate it. For some applications that require little or no security, session ID validation may not be needed, but if your application requires security, validation is mandatory. Otherwise, an old session could be restored by a user modifying their cookies. When session data is available in a database, every time a valid session is found in the user's cookie, a database query is performed to match it. If the session ID does not match, the session is destroyed. Session IDs can never be updated, they can only be generated when a new session is created. In order to store sessions, you must first create a database table for this purpose. Here is the basic prototype (for MySQL) required by the session class:: CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `ci_sessions` ( session_id varchar(40) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, ip_address varchar(45) DEFAULT '0' NOT NULL, user_agent varchar(120) NOT NULL, last_activity int(10) unsigned DEFAULT 0 NOT NULL, user_data text NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (session_id, ip_address, user_agent), KEY `last_activity_idx` (`last_activity`) ); .. note:: By default the table is called ci_sessions, but you can name it anything you want as long as you update the application/config/config.php file so that it contains the name you have chosen. Once you have created your database table you can enable the database option in your config.php file as follows:: $config['sess_use_database'] = TRUE; Once enabled, the Session class will store session data in the DB. Make sure you've specified the table name in your config file as well:: $config['sess_table_name'] = 'ci_sessions'; .. note:: The Cookie driver has built-in garbage collection which clears out expired sessions so you do not need to write your own routine to do it. Native Driver ------------- The Native driver relies on native PHP sessions to store data in the $_SESSION superglobal array. All stored values continue to be available through $_SESSION, but flash- and temp- data items carry special prefixes. Custom Drivers -------------- You may also :doc:`create your own <../general/creating_drivers>` custom session drivers. A session driver basically manages an array of name/value pairs with some sort of storage mechanism. To make a new driver, extend CI_Session_driver. Overload the initialize() method and read or create session data. Then implement a save handler to write changed data to storage (sess_save), a destroy handler to remove deleted data (sess_destroy), a regenerate handler to make a new session ID (sess_regenerate), and an access handler to expose the data (get_userdata). Your initial class might look like:: class CI_Session_custom extends CI_Session_driver { protected function initialize() { // Read existing session data or create a new one } public function sess_save() { // Save current data to storage } public function sess_destroy() { // Destroy the current session and clean up storage } public function sess_regenerate() { // Create new session ID } public function &get_userdata() { // Return a reference to your userdata array } } Notice that get_userdata() returns a reference so the parent library is accessing the same array the driver object is using. This saves memory and avoids synchronization issues during usage. Put your driver in the libraries/Session/drivers folder anywhere in your package paths. This includes the application directory, the system directory, or any path you add with $CI->load->add_package_path(). Your driver must be named CI_Session_<name>, and your filename must be Session_<name>.php, preferably also capitalized, such as:: CI_Session_foo in libraries/Session/drivers/Session_foo.php Then specify the driver by setting 'sess_driver' in your config.php file or as a parameter when loading the CI_Session object:: $config['sess_driver'] = 'foo'; OR:: $CI->load->driver('session', array('sess_driver' => 'foo')); The driver specified by 'sess_driver' is automatically included as a valid driver. However, if you want to make a custom driver available as an option without making it the initially loaded driver, set 'sess_valid_drivers' in your config.php file to an array including your driver name:: $config['sess_valid_drivers'] = array('sess_driver');