Ah, yes. That way you'll set session time for all users. So, hash in cookie, and some table, and check when he returns then reauthenticate. Damn, too much work :)
Regards, Saša Stamenković On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 3:45 PM, Jurian Sluiman <[email protected]>wrote: > On Wednesday 10 Mar 2010 15:38:39 Саша Стаменковић wrote: > > Yes, but if you change it from ini, you change it on every request, so no > > conditional changes in the code, thats what holografix is talking about. > > > > So, if you keep it default, no ini, you can change it with > > > > if ($form->getValue('remember')) { > > ini_set('session.gc_maxlifetime', 604800); > > } > > > > if user checked remember me. > > > > Regards, > > Saša Stamenković > > Another option is not to use the session time for specific user logins. > Sessions are server side and are probably application wide. So you can't > have > a session time per user login. If you need to keep the user logged in, a > cookie is meant to support this. > > Regards, Jurian > -- > Jurian Sluiman > CTO Soflomo V.O.F. > http://soflomo.com >
