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docs/sessions.html

400:5b276bbcbbb5
2005-07-16 paulb [project @ 2005-07-16 20:32:38 by paulb] Changed virtual path info in sub-resources so that it may be an empty string.
     1 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">     2 <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">     3 <head>     4   <meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type" />     5   <title>Sessions and Persistent Information</title>     6   <meta name="generator"     7  content="amaya 8.1a, see http://www.w3.org/Amaya/" />     8   <link href="styles.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />     9 </head>    10 <body>    11 <h1>Sessions and Persistent Information</h1>    12 <p>The term "session" is a technical term describing information which    13 is remembered by an application for a particular user. Sessions work in    14 conjunction which other mechanisms - typically <a href="cookies.html">cookies</a>    15 and <a href="users.html">user identifiers</a> - like this:</p>    16 <ol>    17   <li> The application finds out who the user is - this information may    18 be recorded in a <a href="cookies.html">cookie</a> or be associated    19 with a request in <a href="users.html">some other way</a>.</li>    20   <li>It then accesses a data store containing information associated    21 different users.</li>    22   <li>Finally, it accesses information specific to the stated user -    23 this is&nbsp;that particular user's session.</li>    24 </ol>    25 <h2>Sessions vs. Persistent Information</h2>    26 <p>Information can be said to be "persistent" when&nbsp;it is    27 remembered beyond the lifetime of a particular request to an    28 application. Sessions, meanwhile, are effectively a special case of    29 persistent information - data is addressed or accessed using each    30 user's identity, and the information is partitioned in such a way that    31 sessions cannot be shared between users.</p>    32 <table style="text-align: left; width: 80%;" align="center" border="1"    33  cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" width="80%">    34   <tbody>    35     <tr>    36       <td></td>    37       <th style="text-align: center;">Sessions</th>    38       <th style="text-align: center;">Persistent Information</th>    39     </tr>    40     <tr>    41       <th>Access</th>    42       <td align="undefined" valign="undefined">Through user identity.</td>    43       <td align="undefined" valign="undefined">Through any relevant    44 concept: users, documents, orders, products, locations - anything an    45 application might want to remember.</td>    46     </tr>    47     <tr>    48       <th>Partitioning</th>    49       <td align="undefined" valign="undefined">By user identity. Each    50 user has its own private data store.</td>    51       <td align="undefined" valign="undefined">Arbitrary. Many data    52 stores or data sources may be set up. The data may be shared across the    53 entire application or there may be access controls in place.</td>    54     </tr>    55   </tbody>    56 </table>    57 <p>Access to persistent information in general can be done by using    58 database access libraries, for example - see <a href="integrating.html">"Integrating    59 with Other Systems"</a> for more details. </p>    60 <h2>More About Sessions</h2>    61 <ul>    62   <li><a href="sessions-usage.html">Using Sessions</a></li>    63   <li><a href="sessions-servers.html">Server Environment Support for    64 Sessions</a></li>    65 </ul>    66 </body>    67 </html>