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I have an app setup where each user belongs to a company, and that company has a subdomain (I am using basecamp style subdomains). The problem that I am facing is that rails is creating multiple cookies (one for lvh.me and another for subdomain.lvh.me) which is causing quite a few breaks in my application(such as flash messages being persistent though out all requests once signed in).

I have this in my /cofig/initilizers/session_store.rb file:

AppName::Application.config.session_store :cookie_store, key: '_application_devise_session', domain: :all

The domain: :all seems to be the standard answer I found on Google, but that doesn't seem to be working for me. Any help is appreciated!

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4 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

As it turns outs 'domain: all' creates a cookie for all the different subdomains that are visited during that session (and it ensures that they are passed around between request). If no domain argument is passed, it means that a new cookie is created for every different domain that is visited in the same session and the old one gets discarded. What I needed was a single cookie that is persistent throughout the session, even when the domain changes. Hence, passing 'domain: lvh.me' solved the problem in development. This creates a single cookie that stays there between different subdomains.

For anyone needing further explanation, this is a great link: http://excid3.com/blog/sharing-a-devise-user-session-across-subdomains-with-rails-3/

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1  
Thanks Dude.. I've been facing this issue on one of my projects.. Finally found the solution.. – Shirjeel Alam May 1 '12 at 19:56

For some reason replacing :all with the domain did not work (rails 3.2.11) for me. It took a piece of custom Middleware to fix it. A summary of that solution is below.

tl;dr: You need to write a custom Rack Middleware. You need add it into your conifg/environments/[production|development].rb. This is on Rails 3.2.11

Cookie sessions are usually stored only for your top level domain.

If you look in Chrome -> Settings -> Show advanced settings… -> Privacy/Content settings… -> All cookies and site data… -> Search {yourdomain.com} You can see that there will be separate entries for sub1.yourdomain.com and othersub.yourdomain.com and yourdomain.com

The challenge is to use the same session store file across all subdomains.

Step 1: Add Custom Middleware Class

This is where Rack Middleware comes in. Some relevant rack & rails resources:

Here is a custom class that you should add in the lib This was written by @Nader and you all should thank him

# Custom Domain Cookie
#
# Set the cookie domain to the custom domain if it's present
class CustomDomainCookie
  def initialize(app, default_domain)
    @app = app
    @default_domain = default_domain
  end

  def call(env)
    host = env["HTTP_HOST"].split(':').first
    env["rack.session.options"][:domain] = custom_domain?(host) ? ".#{host}" : "#{@default_domain}"
    @app.call(env)
  end

  def custom_domain?(host)
    host !~ /#{@default_domain.sub(/^\./, '')}/i
  end
end

Basically what this does is that it will map all of your cookie session data back onto the exact same cookie file that is equal to your root domain.

Step 2: Add To Rails Config

Now that you have a custom class in lib, make sure are autoloading it. If that meant nothing to you, look here: Rails 3 autoload

The first thing is to make sure that you are system-wide using a cookie store. In config/application.rb we tell Rails to use a cookie store.

# We use a cookie_store for session data
config.session_store :cookie_store,
                     :key => '_yourappsession',
                     :domain => :all

The reason this is here is mentioned here is because of the :domain => :all line. There are other people that have suggested to specify :domain => ".yourdomain.com" instead of :domain => :all. For some reason this did not work for me and I needed the custom Middleware class as described above.

Then in your config/environments/production.rb add:

config.middleware.use "CustomDomainCookie", ".yourdomain.com"

Note that the preceding dot is necessary. See "sub-domain cookies, sent in a parent domain request?" for why.

Then in your config/environments/development.rb add:

config.middleware.use "CustomDomainCookie", ".lvh.me"

The lvh.me trick maps onto localhost. It's awesome. See this Railscast about subdomains and this note for more info.

Hopefully that should do it. I honestly am not entirely sure why the process is this convoluted, as I feel cross subdomain sites are common. If anyone has any further insights into the reasons behind each of these steps, please enlighten us in the comments.

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Did you try

AppName::Application.config.session_store :cookie_store, key: '_application_devise_session', domain: 'lvh.me'  

)

basically we are saying have single cookie for base domain and just ignore sub domain..though this approach has some flaws still ...

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http://excid3.com/blog/sharing-a-devise-user-session-across-subdomains-with-rails-3/

"The part you want to watch out for here is that if you set :domain => :all like is recommend in some places, it simply won’t work unless you’re using localhost. :all defaults to a TLD length of 1, which means if you’re testing with Pow (myapp.dev) it won’t work either because that is a TLD of length 2."

In other words you need:

 App.config.session_store ... , :domain => :all, :tld_length => 2

Also a good idea to clear your cookies

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This is the best answer because the one change works in all environments (app.com and app.dev). Custom middleware is not necessary. Also good point to clear cookies! – Turadg Apr 22 at 14:14

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