With file based sessions, they will be auto-pruned by the PHP session clean-up cron – so the files are likely to be deleted within ~7200 seconds of creation. So even on a busy site (30k uniques per day), there usually only around 4,000 session files in ./var/session – which is nothing for a Linux server.
However, the clean-up actually relies on the cron working - which doesn't normally look in the ./var/session directory of Magento. So you should set up a new system cron
/usr/bin/find /home/myuser/public_html/var/session -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -type f -cmin +$(/usr/lib/php5/maxlifetime) -print0 -exec rm {} \; >/dev/null 2>&1
The default clean up period for sessions is 7200 seconds, which should be more than adequate, although you can change the above to suit.
With Memcache sessions, TCP/IP is the only overhead – which for a single-server deployment, would make it slower than file based. So then, you would use a unix socket instead, which removes that overhead and gives better security. But even still, your customer sessions will be truncated/limited as to the amount of RAM you can allocate. The average Magento session is 4Kb – so you’ll be able to support 256 active sessions, per MB you allocate. So be sure to set an appropriate limit to avoid customers randomly losing cart/session. And also bear in mind, a Memcache daemon restart will wipe out all existing sessions (BAD!).
With Redis (not native, but available via an extension), you get a similar level of support as Memcache, but with the added benefits of persistence (should you wish to use it). With the Cm_Redis extension, you'll also be able to take advantage of session compression. We've found this extension works very well on both CE and EE deployments.
The with DB, the default prune expiration setting is a mighty 1 week, so with the above store size as an example (30k uniques per day), you’ll be looking at a DB table size for core_cache_session of around 7GB – which will grind your store to a complete halt, for almost every session based operation.
From experience of hosting both large (230k unique visitors per day) and small (<1k unique visitors per day) stores, our recommendation is:
Single-server deployment - files
Multi-server deployment - Redis (using a separate database from the main Magento cache)
I wrote some really thorough replies here http://magebase.com/magento-tutorials/magento-session-storage-which-to-choose-and-why/comment-page-1/#comment-1980