Provided by: libdata-session-perl_1.18-2_all
NAME
Data::Session::ID::UUID16 - A persistent session manager
Synopsis
See Data::Session for details.
Case-sensitive Options
See "Case-sensitive Options" in Data::Session for important information. To use this module do this: o Specify an id generator of type UUID16, as Data::Session -> new(type => '... id:UUID16 ...')
Description
Data::Session::ID::UUID16 allows Data::Session to generate session ids using Data::UUID.
Method: new()
Creates a new object of type Data::Session::ID::UUID16. "new()" takes a hash of key/value pairs, some of which might mandatory. Further, some combinations might be mandatory. The keys are listed here in alphabetical order. They are lower-case because they are (also) method names, meaning they can be called to set or get the value at any time. o verbose => $integer Print to STDERR more or less information. Typical values are 0, 1 and 2. This key is normally passed in as Data::Session -> new(verbose => $integer). This key is optional.
Method: generate()
Generates the next session id, or dies if it can't. The algorithm is Data::UUID -> new -> create_bin. Returns the new id. Note: A UUID16 hex string is not necessarily a valid UTF8 string, so you can't use UUID16 to generate ids which are to be stored in a Postgres table if the database was created like this (in psql): create database a_db owner an_owner encoding 'UTF8'; Warning: This also means you should never try to use 'driver:File;id:UUID16;...', since the ids generated by this module would rarely if ever be valid as a part of a file name.
Method: id_length()
Returns 16 because that's the number of bytes in a UUID16 digest. This can be used to generate the SQL to create the sessions table. See scripts/digest.pl.
Support
Log a bug on RT: <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Data-Session>.
Author
Data::Session was written by Ron Savage <ron@savage.net.au> in 2010. Home page: <http://savage.net.au/index.html>.
Copyright
Australian copyright (c) 2010, Ron Savage. All Programs of mine are 'OSI Certified Open Source Software'; you can redistribute them and/or modify them under the terms of The Artistic License, a copy of which is available at: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/index.html