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Posted by Josh Whiting on 03/06/05 07:08
I've been trying to switch to MySQL-based session storage instead of the
native PHP session storage. In doing so, I've run into a lot of code on
the web that exhibits a serious flaw regarding concurrent requests from
the same client. All the code I've seen has glossed over the need to
lock the session for the duration of the request, e.g. not allow
concurrent requests to use it until it has finished. PHP's native
session handler correctly does this, but lots of MySQL-driven session
code does not.
Example timeline:
1. client sends a request
2. session data is loaded from the db
3. same client sends a request before the first one is finished (e.g.
frames, tabbed browsing, slow server response times, etc)
4. session data is again loaded from the db
5. the first request changes some values in $_SESSION
6. the second request changes some values in $_SESSION
7. the first request writes the data to the db and exits
8. the second request writes it's data (over that written by the first
request) and exits
PHP's native handler solves this problem by forcing concurrent requests
to wait for each other. The same thing needs to happen in a
database-driven session handler.
SO, does anyone have some code that uses MySQL to replace PHP's native
session storage that also correctly handles this concurrency problem?
Ideally I'd like to see just a set of functions that can be used with
sessions_set_save_handler() to transparently shift PHP's sessions to a
database, but I'm not going to use the stuff I've found on the web or
even in books (appendix D of O'Reilly's Web Database Applications with
PHP & MySQL publishes code with this problem).
Folks using database sessions who do not deal with this scenario be
warned! I'm surprised so much bad code is going around for this task...
Many thanks in advance,
Josh Whiting
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