oracular (3) Apache::SessionX.3pm.gz

Provided by: libapache-sessionx-perl_2.01-6_all bug

NAME

       Apache::SessionX  - An extended persistence framework for session data

SYNOPSIS

DESCRIPTION

       Apache::SessionX extents Apache::Session.  It was initially written to use Apache::Session from inside of
       HTML::Embperl, but is seems to be useful outside of Embperl as well, so here is it as standalone module.

       Apache::Session is a persistence framework which is particularly useful for tracking session data between
       httpd requests.  Apache::Session is designed to work with Apache and mod_perl, but it should work under
       CGI and other web servers, and it also works outside of a web server altogether.

       Apache::Session consists of five components: the interface, the object store, the lock manager, the ID
       generator, and the serializer.  The interface is defined in SessionX.pm, which is meant to be easily
       subclassed.  The object store can be the filesystem, a Berkeley DB, a MySQL DB, an Oracle DB, or a
       Postgres DB. Locking is done by lock files, semaphores, or the locking capabilities of MySQL and
       Postgres.  Serialization is done via Storable, and optionally  ASCII-fied via MIME or pack().  ID numbers
       are generated via MD5.  The reader is encouraged to extend these capabilities to meet his own
       requirements.

INTERFACE

       The interface to Apache::SessionX is very simple: tie a hash to the desired class and use the hash as
       normal.  The constructor takes two optional arguments.  The first argument is the desired session ID
       number, or undef for a new session.  The second argument is a hash of options that will be passed to the
       object store and locker classes.

   Addtional Attributes for TIE
       lazy
           By specifying this attribute, you tell Apache::Session to not do any access to the object store,
           until the first read or write access to the tied hash. Otherwise the tie function will make sure the
           hash exist or creates a new one.

       create_unknown
           Setting this to one causes Apache::Session to create a new session with the given id (or a new id,
           depending on "recreate_id") when the specified session id does not exists. Otherwise it will die.

       recreate_id
           Setting this to one causes Apache::Session to create a new session id when the specified session id
           does not exists.

       idfrom
           instead of passing in a session id, you can pass in a string, from which Apache::SessionX generates
           the id in case it needs one. The main advantage from generating the id by yourself is, that in 'lazy'
           mode the id is only generated when the session is accessed.

       newid
           Setting this to one will cause Apache::SessionX to generate a new id every time the session is saved.
           If you call "getid" or "getids" it will return the new id that will be used to save the data.

       config
           Use predefiend config from Apache::SessionX::Config, which is configured at package installation
           time.  On Debian, these may be altered by running "dpkg-reconfigure libapache-sessionx-perl".

       object_store
           Specify the class for the object store. (The Apache::Session:: prefix is optional) Only for
           Apache::Session 1.00.

       lock_manager
           Specify the class for the lock manager. (The Apache::Session:: prefix is optional) Only for
           Apache::Session 1.00.

       Store
           Specify the class for the object store. (The Apache::Session::Store prefix is optional) Only for
           Apache::Session 1.5x.

       Lock
           Specify the class for the lock manager. (The Apache::Session::Lock prefix is optional) Only for
           Apache::Session 1.5x.

       Generate
           Specify the class for the id generator. (The Apache::Session::Generate prefix is optional) Only for
           Apache::Session 1.5x.

       Serialize
           Specify the class for the data serializer. (The Apache::Session::Serialize prefix is optional) Only
           for Apache::Session 1.5x.

       Example using attrubtes to specfiy store and object classes instead of a derived class:

        use Apache::SessionX

        tie %session, 'Apache::SessionX', undef,
           {
           object_store => 'DBIStore',
           lock_manager => 'SysVSemaphoreLocker',
           DataSource => 'dbi:Oracle:db'
           };

       NOTE: Apache::SessionX will "require" the necessary additional perl modules for you.

   Addtional Methods
       setid ($id)
           Set the session id for further accesses.

       setidfrom ($string)
           Set the string that is passed to the generate function to compute the id.

       getid
           Get the session id. The difference to using $session{_session_id} is, that in lazy mode, getid will
           not create a new session id, if it doesn't exists.

       getids ($init)
           return the an array where the first element is the initial id, the second element is the current id
           and the third element is set to true, when the session data was modified. If the session was deleted,
           the initial id (first array value) will be set to '!DELETE'.

           If the optional parameter $init is set to true, getids will initialize the session (i.e. read from
           the store) when not already done.

       cleanup
           Writes any pending data, releases all locks and deletes all data from memory.

SEE ALSO

       See documentation of Apache::Session for more information about it's internals
       Apache::SessionX::Generate::MD5
       Apache::Session::Store::*
       Apache::Session::Lock::*
       Apache::Session::Serialize::*

AUTHORS

       Gerald Richter <richter@dev.ecos.de> is the current maintainer.

       This class was written by Jeffrey Baker (jeffrey@kathyandjeffrey.net) but it is taken wholesale from a
       patch that Gerald Richter (richter@ecos.de) sent me against Apache::Session.