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CSC 2720 Building Web Applications

CSC 2720 Building Web Applications. Cookies, URL-Rewriting, Hidden Fields and Session Management. Cookies. HTTP cookies are data which a server-side script sends to a web client to keep for a period of time.

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CSC 2720 Building Web Applications

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  1. CSC 2720Building Web Applications Cookies, URL-Rewriting, Hidden Fields and Session Management

  2. Cookies • HTTP cookies are data which a server-side script sends to a web client to keep for a period of time. • On every subsequent HTTP request, the web client automatically sends the cookies back to server (unless the cookie support is turned off). • The cookies are embedded in the HTTP header (and therefore not visible to the users).

  3. Cookies • Shortcomings of using cookies to keep data • User may turn off cookies support. • Data are kept with the browser • Users using the same browser share the cookies. • Limited number of cookies (20) per server/domain and limited size (4k bytes) per cookie • Client can temper with cookies • Modify cookie files, use JavaScript to create/modify cookies, etc. • Notes • Don't always rely on cookies as the client may have turned off cookies support. • Don't store sensitive info in cookies

  4. PHP – Accessing Cookies • To set a cookie, call setcookie() • e.g., setcookie('username', 'Joe'); • To delete a cookie (use setcookie() without a value) • e.g., setcookie('username'); • To retrieve a cookie, refer to $COOKIE • e.g. $username = $_COOKIE('username'); • Note: • Cookies can only be set before any output is sent. • You cannot set and access a cookie in the same page. Cookies set in a page are available only in the future requests.

  5. PHP – More About Setting Cookies … setcookie(name, value, expiration, path, domain, secure, httponly) • expiration • Cookie expiration time in seconds • 0  The cookie is not to be stored persistently and will be deleted when the web client closes. • Negative value  Request the web client to delete the cookie • e.g.: setcookie('username', 'Joe', time() + 1800);// Expire in 30 minutes

  6. PHP – More About Setting Cookies … • path • Sets the path to which the cookie applies. • The cookie is only visible to all the pages in that directory and its sub-directories. • If set to '/', the cookie will be available within the entire domain. • If set to '/foo/', the cookie will only be available within the /foo/ directory and all sub-directories such as /foo/bar/ of domain . • The default value is the current directory that the cookie is being set in.

  7. PHP – More About Setting Cookies … • domain • The domain that the cookie is available. • To make the cookie available on all subdomains of example.com, you'd set it to '.example.com'. • Setting it to 'www.example.com' will make the cookie only available in the www subdomain. • secure • Indicates that the cookie should only be transmitted over a secure HTTPS connection from the client. When set to TRUE, the cookie will only be set if a secure connection exists. The default is FALSE. • httponly • When TRUE the cookie will be made accessible only through the HTTP protocol.

  8. URL-Rewriting • Append the data to the URL • e.g.: http://www.xyz.com/foo.php?name1=value1&name2=value2 • Data are kept along with the "page" • Need to append the data to every URL in the page that needs to carry the data to another page. • Every 'name' and 'value' should be URL encoded using urlencode(). • Shortcoming of using URL-rewriting to keep data: • Limited number of characters in an URL • Not suitable for sensitive info • You can encrypt the data to improve security (e.g., www.ebay.com) • Breaks when a user access a static HTML page

  9. PHP – URL-Rewriting Example 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 <?php // Append all (key, value) pairs in $array to $url as // $url?key1=value1&key2=value2&… function append_data_to_url($url, $array) { $first = true; $url .= '?'; foreach ($array as $key => $value) { if (! $first) $url .= '&'; else $first = false; $url .= urlencode($key) . '=' . urlencode($value); } return $url; } // Continue next page

  10. PHP – URL-Rewriting Example 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 // A script that lists 20 items per page $current_page = $_REQUEST['page']; $sort_order = $_REQUEST['sort']; // Perform validation and set default values here … // Create parameters that need to be appended to URL $params = array('page' => $current_page + 1, 'sort' => $sort_order); // Append the above parameters to the URL that links // to the next page $next_page_url = append_data_to_url( $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'], $params); // Repeat for other URLs that need to carry data // in the URL … ?>

  11. PHP – URL-Rewriting Example 36 37 38 39 40 4142 43 44 45 46 <html><head><title>URL-Rewriting Example</title></head> <body> <?php // Retrieve and display current page's data here … ?> <a href="<?php echo $next_page_url;?>">Next Page</a> … </body></html> • In this example, when the user clicks the "Next Page" link, the script will knows which page to display and what sorting order to use.

  12. Hidden Fields in HTML Form • Data are encoded as hidden fields in HTML form as: <input type="hidden" name="username" value="CJ Yuan" /> • Shortcoming of using URL-rewriting to keep data: • Require HTML form elements

  13. Session • A session is a period of time in which all activities happened within the period by the same web client are considered "related" (typically belong to the same application.) • Session Tracking – keeping track of users as they traverse from one web page (generated from a script) to another within a website (or within a web application).

  14. How Session Works? • The first time a web client visits a server, the server sends a unique "session ID" to the web client for the client to keep. • Session ID is typically stored in the cookies. • The session ID is used by the server to identify the client. • For each session ID created, the server also creates a storage space. Server-side scripts that receive the same session ID share the same storage space. • The storage space is typically implemented as a map-liked data structure. • In PHP, it is an associative array named $_SESSION[]. • A session's "storage space" is only kept alive for a period of time (session period) or until it is explicitly deleted.

  15. PHP – Participating in a session 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 <?php // Must call this function first in all scripts that // need to participate in the same session. session_start(); // Now we can read/write data from/to $_SESSION[] if (authenticate($_POST['user'], $_POST['passwd'])) { // Use this value to remember if a user has 'logged in' $_SESSION['user'] = $_POST['user']; } else unset($_SESSION['user']); … ?> login.php The first time session_start() is called, it will attempt to send a cookie named PHPSESSID with a generated session ID made up of 32 hexadecimal letters. The data stored in $_SESSION[] will be saved in an external file when the script exits.

  16. PHP – Participating in a session (continue) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 <?php // To participate in the session session_start(); // Session data set in login.php are available here if (! isset($_SESSION['user'])) { // User has not yet logged on } … ?> another_file.php If a user has successfully logged in through login.php, then The next time session_start() is called, it will load the session data from a file into $_SESSION[] based on the value of PHPSESSID.

  17. PHP – Ending a session 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 <?php // To start or participate in a session. session_start(); $_SESSION = array();// Clearing all session data // Delete the cookie that stores the session ID to KILL the session if (isset($_COOKIE[session_name()])) setcookie(session_name(), '', time()-3600, '/'); // Finally, destroy the session (Deleting // the session data stored in the file) session_destroy(); ?> logout.php Note: session_name() returns the name of the cookie that stores the session ID.

  18. PHP – Setting Session Parameters in php.ini Some of the session related parameters in "php.ini": ; This option enables administrators to make their users invulnerable to ; attacks which involve passing session ids in URLs; defaults to 0. ; session.use_only_cookies = 1 ; Name of the session (used as cookie name). session.name = PHPSESSID ; Initialize session on request startup. session.auto_start = 0 ; Lifetime in seconds of cookie or, if 0, until browser is restarted. session.cookie_lifetime = 0 ; The path for which the cookie is valid. session.cookie_path = / ; The domain for which the cookie is valid. session.cookie_domain =

  19. PHP – Function For Setting Session Parameters void session_set_cookie_params( int $lifetime, string $path, string $domain, bool $secure=false, bool $httponly=false ) • Set cookie parameters defined in the php.ini file. The effect of this function only lasts for the duration of the script. Thus, you need to call this function for every request and before session_start() is called. • Default value of $path is '/'. To prevent session ID from being discovered by other PHP scripts running in the same domain, you should set $path to the subfolder where your scripts are stored.

  20. Combined Use • All of Cookies, URL-rewriting, Hidden Fields, and Session can be simultaneously used in a web application. • Cookies: Can persist data for long period but is not suitable for keeping sensitive data or large amount of data. • URL-rewriting: Keep data along with page • Hidden Fields: Keep data along with page (can keep more data but requires HTML form) • Session Objects: Keep "short-live" data shared among the server-side scripts within a web application for a particular web client.

  21. Summary • Session Management • Cookies • URL-Rewriting • Hidden Fields in HTML Form • High level APIs in Java and HttpSession Objects. • References • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_cookie • PHP Manual – Session Handling • http://hk.php.net/manual/en/book.session.php

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