session_set_save_handlerSets user-level session storage functions
&reftitle.description;
boolsession_set_save_handlercallableopencallableclosecallablereadcallablewritecallabledestroycallablegccallablecreate_sidcallablevalidate_sidcallableupdate_timestamp
Since PHP 5.4 it is possible to register the following prototype:
boolsession_set_save_handlerobjectsessionhandlerboolregister_shutdown&true;session_set_save_handler sets the user-level
session storage functions which are used for storing and
retrieving data associated with a session. This is most useful
when a storage method other than those supplied by PHP sessions
is preferred, e.g. storing the session data in a local database.
&reftitle.parameters;
This function has two prototypes.
sessionhandler
An instance of a class implementing
SessionHandlerInterface, and optionally
SessionIdInterface and/or
SessionUpdateTimestampHandlerInterface, such as
SessionHandler, to register as the session
handler. Since PHP 5.4 only.
register_shutdown
Register session_write_close as a
register_shutdown_function function.
or
open
A callable with the following signature:
boolopenstringsavePathstringsessionName
The open callback works like a constructor in classes and is
executed when the session is being opened. It is the first callback
function executed when the session is started automatically or
manually with session_start.
Return value is &true; for success, &false; for failure.
close
A callable with the following signature:
boolclose
The close callback works like a destructor in classes and is
executed after the session write callback has been called. It is also invoked when
session_write_close is called.
Return value should be &true; for success, &false; for failure.
read
A callable with the following signature:
boolreadstringsessionId
The read callback must always return a session encoded (serialized)
string, or an empty string if there is no data to read.
This callback is called internally by PHP when the session starts or
when session_start is called. Before this callback is invoked
PHP will invoke the open callback.
The value this callback returns must be in exactly the same serialized format that was originally
passed for storage to the write callback. The value returned will be
unserialized automatically by PHP and used to populate the $_SESSION superglobal.
While the data looks similar to serialize please note it is a different format
which is specified in the session.serialize_handler ini setting.
write
A callable with the following signature:
boolwritestringsessionIdstringdata
The write callback is called when the session needs to be saved and closed. This
callback receives the current session ID a serialized version the $_SESSION superglobal. The serialization
method used internally by PHP is specified in the session.serialize_handler ini setting.
The serialized session data passed to this callback should be stored against the passed session ID. When retrieving
this data, the read callback must return the exact value that was originally passed to
the write callback.
This callback is invoked when PHP shuts down or explicitly when session_write_close
is called. Note that after executing this function PHP will internally execute the close callback.
The "write" handler is not executed until after the output stream is
closed. Thus, output from debugging statements in the "write"
handler will never be seen in the browser. If debugging output is
necessary, it is suggested that the debug output be written to a
file instead.
destroy
A callable with the following signature:
booldestroystringsessionId
This callback is executed when a session is destroyed with session_destroy or with
session_regenerate_id with the destroy parameter set to &true;.
Return value should be &true; for success, &false; for failure.
gc
A callable with the following signature:
boolgcintlifetime
The garbage collector callback is invoked internally by PHP periodically in order to
purge old session data. The frequency is controlled by
session.gc_probability and session.gc_divisor.
The value of lifetime which is passed to this callback can be set in session.gc_maxlifetime.
Return value should be &true; for success, &false; for failure.
create_sid
A callable with the following signature:
stringcreate_sid
This callback is executed when a new session ID is required. No
parameters are provided, and the return value should be a string that
is a valid session ID for your handler.
validate_sid
A callable with the following signature:
boolvalidate_sidstringkey
This callback is executed when a session is to be started, a session ID is supplied
and session.use_strict_mode is enabled.
The key is the session ID to validate.
A session ID is valid, if a session with that ID already exists.
The return value should be &true; for success, &false; for failure.
update_timestamp
A callable with the following signature:
stringupdate_timestampstringkeystringval
This callback is executed when a session is updated.
key is the session ID, val is the session data.
The return value should be &true; for success, &false; for failure.
&reftitle.returnvalues;
&return.success;
&reftitle.examples;
Custom session handler: see full code in SessionHandlerInterface synopsis.
The following code is for PHP version 5.4.0 and above. We just show the invocation here, the full example can be
seen in the SessionHandlerInterface synopsis linked above.
Note we use the OOP prototype with session_set_save_handler and
register the shutdown function using the function's parameter flag. This is generally
advised when registering objects as session save handlers.
Custom session save handler using objects
The following code is for PHP versions less than 5.4.0.
The following example provides file based session storage similar to the
PHP sessions default save handler files. This
example could easily be extended to cover database storage using your
favorite PHP supported database engine.
Note we additionally register the shutdown function session_write_close
using register_shutdown_function under PHP less than 5.4.0.
This is generally advised when registering objects as session save handlers under PHP less
than 5.4.0.
savePath = $savePath;
if (!is_dir($this->savePath)) {
mkdir($this->savePath, 0777);
}
return true;
}
function close()
{
return true;
}
function read($id)
{
return (string)@file_get_contents("$this->savePath/sess_$id");
}
function write($id, $data)
{
return file_put_contents("$this->savePath/sess_$id", $data) === false ? false : true;
}
function destroy($id)
{
$file = "$this->savePath/sess_$id";
if (file_exists($file)) {
unlink($file);
}
return true;
}
function gc($maxlifetime)
{
foreach (glob("$this->savePath/sess_*") as $file) {
if (filemtime($file) + $maxlifetime < time() && file_exists($file)) {
unlink($file);
}
}
return true;
}
}
$handler = new FileSessionHandler();
session_set_save_handler(
array($handler, 'open'),
array($handler, 'close'),
array($handler, 'read'),
array($handler, 'write'),
array($handler, 'destroy'),
array($handler, 'gc')
);
// the following prevents unexpected effects when using objects as save handlers
register_shutdown_function('session_write_close');
session_start();
// proceed to set and retrieve values by key from $_SESSION
]]>
&reftitle.notes;
When using objects as session save handlers, it is important to register the
shutdown function with PHP to avoid unexpected side-effects from the way
PHP internally destroys objects on shutdown and may prevent the
write and close from being called.
Typically you should register 'session_write_close' using the
register_shutdown_function function.
As of PHP 5.4.0 you can use session_register_shutdown or
simply use the 'register shutdown' flag when invoking
session_set_save_handler using the OOP method and passing an
instance that implements SessionHandlerInterface.
As of PHP 5.0.5 the write and
close handlers are called after object
destruction and therefore cannot use objects or throw exceptions.
Exceptions are not able to be caught since will not be caught nor will
any exception trace be displayed and the execution will just cease unexpectedly.
The object destructors can however use sessions.
It is possible to call session_write_close from the
destructor to solve this chicken and egg problem but the most reliable way is
to register the shutdown function as described above.
Current working directory is changed with some SAPIs if session is
closed in the script termination. It is possible to close the session
earlier with session_write_close.
&reftitle.seealso;
The session.save_handler
configuration directive
The session.serialize_handler
configuration directive.
The register_shutdown_functionThe session_register_shutdown for PHP 5.4.0+
Refer to save_handler.inc
for a full procedural reference implementation