| 
	
 | 
 Posted by laredotornado@zipmail.com on 09/24/07 20:59 
On Sep 24, 3:51 pm, "C." <colin.mckin...@gmail.com> wrote: 
> On 24 Sep, 20:58, "laredotorn...@zipmail.com" 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> <laredotorn...@zipmail.com> wrote: 
> > Hi, 
> 
> > I'm using PHP 4.4.4.  I have two domains --www.mydomain1.comandwww.mydomain2.com.  Both point to the same IP address.  I have two 
> > pages on that IP -- first.php 
> 
> > <?php 
> >     session_start(); 
> >     $_SESSION['test'] = "hello"; 
> > ?> 
> 
> > and second.php 
> 
> > <?php 
> >    session_start(); 
> >    print $_SESSION['test']; 
> > ?> 
> 
> > What I would like is when I first visithttp://www.mydomain1.com/first.php 
> > and then visithttp://www.mydomain2.com/second.phptohave the word 
> > "hello" printed.  Does anyone know how to adjust the above scripts or 
> > my environment to make this possible? 
> 
> > Thanks, - Dave 
> 
> I'll assume you're using cookies for sessions. In which case the 
> question is how you get a cookie from one site set when you are 
> accessing another. 
> 
> The solution is to suck in pages from both mydomain1 and mydomain2 at 
> the point where the session is established. This could be done with 
> frames or by redirection. Life's probably a lot simpler if you pass 
> across the generated session id from one to the other, but you need to 
> be wary of session fixation. Otherwise you'll probably need to write 
> your own session handler to maintain 2 sessions alive and in sync. 
> 
> HTH 
> 
> C.- Hide quoted text - 
> 
> - Show quoted text - 
 
Thanks for your response, C.  Regarding 
 
> Life's probably a lot simpler if you pass 
> across the generated session id from one to the other 
 
hate to be dense, but how do you do that? - Dave
 
  
Navigation:
[Reply to this message] 
 |