Provided by: libdancer2-perl_0.166001+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       Dancer2::Core::Role::SessionFactory - Role for session factories

VERSION

       version 0.166001

DESCRIPTION

       Any class that consumes this role will be able to store, create, retrieve and destroy
       session objects.

       The default values for attributes can be overridden in your Dancer2 configuration. See
       "Session-engine" in Dancer2::Config.

ATTRIBUTES

   cookie_name
       The name of the cookie to create for storing the session key

       Defaults to "dancer.session"

   cookie_domain
       The domain of the cookie to create for storing the session key.  Defaults to the empty
       string and is unused as a result.

   cookie_path
       The path of the cookie to create for storing the session key.  Defaults to "/".

   cookie_duration
       Default duration before session cookie expiration.  If set, the Dancer2::Core::Session
       "expires" attribute will be set to the current time plus this duration (expression parsed
       by Dancer2::Core::Time).

   session_duration
       Duration in seconds before sessions should expire, regardless of cookie expiration.  If
       set, then SessionFactories should use this to enforce a limit on session validity.

   is_secure
       Boolean flag to tell if the session cookie is secure or not.

       Default is false.

   is_http_only
       Boolean flag to tell if the session cookie is http only.

       Default is true.

INTERFACE

       Following is the interface provided by this role. When specified the required methods to
       implement are described.

   create
       Create a brand new session object and store it. Returns the newly created session object.

       Triggers an exception if the session is unable to be created.

           my $session = MySessionFactory->create();

       This method does not need to be implemented in the class.

   generate_id
       Returns a randomly-generated, guaranteed-unique string.  By default, it is a 32-character,
       URL-safe, Base64 encoded combination of a 32 bit timestamp and a 160 bit SHA1 digest of
       random seed data.  The timestamp ensures that session IDs are generally monotonic.

       The default algorithm is not guaranteed cryptographically secure, but it's still
       reasonably strong for general use.

       If you have installed Math::Random::ISAAC::XS and Crypt::URandom, the seed data will be
       generated from a cryptographically-strong random number generator.

       This method is used internally by create() to set the session ID.

       This method does not need to be implemented in the class unless an alternative method for
       session ID generation is desired.

   retrieve
       Return the session object corresponding to the session ID given. If none is found,
       triggers an exception.

           my $session = MySessionFactory->retrieve(id => $id);

       The method "_retrieve" must be implemented.  It must take $id as a single argument and
       must return a hash reference of session data.

   destroy
       Purges the session object that matches the ID given. Returns the ID of the destroyed
       session if succeeded, triggers an exception otherwise.

           MySessionFactory->destroy(id => $id);

       The "_destroy" method must be implemented. It must take $id as a single argument and
       destroy the underlying data.

   flush
       Make sure the session object is stored in the factory's backend. This method is called to
       notify the backend about the change in the session object.

       The Dancer application will not call flush unless the session "is_dirty" attribute is true
       to avoid unnecessary writes to the database when no data has been modified.

       An exception is triggered if the session is unable to be updated in the backend.

           MySessionFactory->flush(session => $session);

       The "_flush" method must be implemented.  It must take two arguments: the $id and a hash
       reference of session data.

   set_cookie_header
       Sets the session cookie into the response object

           MySessionFactory->set_cookie_header(
               response  => $response,
               session   => $session,
               destroyed => undef,
           );

       The "response" parameter contains a Dancer2::Core::Response object.  The "session"
       parameter contains a Dancer2::Core::Session object.

       The "destroyed" parameter is optional.  If true, it indicates the session was marked
       destroyed by the request context.  The default "set_cookie_header" method doesn't need
       that information, but it is included in case a SessionFactory must handle destroyed
       sessions differently (such as signalling to middleware).

   cookie
       Coerce a session object into a Dancer2::Core::Cookie object.

           MySessionFactory->cookie(session => $session);

   sessions
       Return a list of all session IDs stored in the backend.  Useful to create cleaning
       scripts, in conjunction with session's creation time.

       The "_sessions" method must be implemented.  It must return an array reference of session
       IDs (or an empty array reference).

CONFIGURATION

       If there are configuration values specific to your session factory in your config.yml or
       environment, those will be passed to the constructor of the session factory automatically.
       In order to accept and store them, you need to define accessors for them.

           engines:
             session:
               Example:
                 database_connection: "some_data"

       In your session factory:

           package Dancer2::Session::Example;
           use Moo;
           with "Dancer2::Core::Role::SessionFactory";

           has database_connection => ( is => "ro" );

       You need to do this for every configuration key. The ones that do not have accessors
       defined will just go to the void.

AUTHOR

       Dancer Core Developers

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2015 by Alexis Sukrieh.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.