On May 21, 7:44 pm, mdipierro <[email protected]> wrote: > Does this mean that the "remember me for 30 days" feature works well > for you? > I have been having some problems with it. >
Good question :) Actually without this option I've experienced that my session expires after a while (I think 10 minutes?), while with this option the session remains active for a long time (at least one day). But now that you mention this, I should check this behaviour thoroughly. On May 21, 5:13 pm, weheh <[email protected]> wrote: > Why don't you just keep a last_activity date? Also, the auth event log > keeps track of the last login automatically. Why not check it to see > what it's doing regarding last login when user has the "remember" > checkbox checked? Technically, if it's checked, they're not logging > in, right? Can you better articulate what you are really trying to > measure? I'm trying to measure user activity on the application - like sign- ups, sign-ins and sign-outs, etc. Introducing last_login was a way to internally track "active" users (for example, anyone with last_login in past one week is active, and anyone who has not logged in for a long time is an "inactive" user). I'm actually trying to mash-up my site activities with google analytics to come up with a variety of analytics of user behaviour that google analytics can't track alone. auth_event should do it. I'm checking its behaviour (checking "Remember me for 30 days" needs some time. :) ) Thanks a lot. I forgot all about auth_event. I should be using it to track my custom events as well.

