On Tue, Jan 17, 2012 at 5:17 PM, Haluk Karamete wrote:
> This brings the question to the following;
> WHEN DOES THE SERVER KNOW THAT A USER IS REALLY GONE OR HE CLOSED HIS BROWSER?
Just addressing this quesiton -- you are correct that the browser does
not tell the application when it closes. What
> -Original Message-
> From: Stuart Dallas [mailto:stu...@3ft9.com]
> Sent: 18 January 2012 12:02
>
> On 17 Jan 2012, at 23:17, Haluk Karamete wrote:
>
> > I'm afraid session.cookie_lifetime = 0 keeps all session data (
> that
> > is past and present ) in server memory until a server rest
On 17 Jan 2012, at 23:17, Haluk Karamete wrote:
> Back to this session expiration...
>
> that old quote said...
>
> The default behaviour for sessions is to keep a session open
> indefinitely and only to expire a session when the browser is closed.
> This behaviour can be changed in the php.ini
Back to this session expiration...
that old quote said...
The default behaviour for sessions is to keep a session open
indefinitely and only to expire a session when the browser is closed.
This behaviour can be changed in the php.ini file by altering the
line:
session.cookie_lifetime = 0
If you
great exp. now I'm heading towards the
http://www.php.net/manual/en/session.configuration.php#ini.session.cookie_path.
you definitely deserved a good chocolate cookie!
On Mon, Jan 16, 2012 at 6:38 PM, Stuart Dallas wrote:
> On 17 Jan 2012, at 02:21, Haluk Karamete wrote:
>
>> Well Stuart,
>>
>>
On 17 Jan 2012, at 02:21, Haluk Karamete wrote:
> Well Stuart,
>
> When I said this
>
>> In ASP, I create a virtual app at the IIS server - assigning a virtual
>> dir path to the app, and from that point on, any page being served
>> under that virtual path is treated as an isolated ASP app and t
Well Stuart,
When I said this
> In ASP, I create a virtual app at the IIS server - assigning a virtual
> dir path to the app, and from that point on, any page being served
> under that virtual path is treated as an isolated ASP app and thus the
> sessions are kept isolated and not get mixed up by
On 16 Jan 2012, at 22:51, Haluk Karamete wrote:
> Hi, in ASP, sessions expire when the client does not request an asp
> page for more than 20 min. (The 20 min thing is a server level setting
> - which can be changed by IIS settings ) And sessions work out of the
> box.
>
> I use sessions a lot.
Hi, in ASP, sessions expire when the client does not request an asp
page for more than 20 min. (The 20 min thing is a server level setting
- which can be changed by IIS settings ) And sessions work out of the
box.
I use sessions a lot. So, most likely, I would keep that style in my
PHP apps too.
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