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Why does the property SessionID on the Session-object in an ASP.NET-page change between requests?

I have a page like this:

...
<div>
    SessionID: <%= SessionID %>
</div>
...

And the output keeps changing every time I hit F5, independent of browser.

I've seen this work correctly in other projects.

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5 Answers

up vote 54 down vote accepted

This is the reason

When using cookie-based session state, ASP.NET does not allocate storage for session data until the Session object is used. As a result, a new session ID is generated for each page request until the session object is accessed. If your application requires a static session ID for the entire session, you can either implement the Session_Start method in the application's Global.asax file and store data in the Session object to fix the session ID, or you can use code in another part of your application to explicitly store data in the Session object.

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.web.sessionstate.httpsessionstate.sessionid.aspx

So basically, unless you access your session object on the backend, a new sessionId will be generated with each request

EDIT

This code must be added on the file Global.asax. It adds an entry to the Session object so you fix the session until it expires.

protected void Session_Start(Object sender, EventArgs e) 
{
    Session["init"] = 0;
}
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8  
I did not know that, never had an issue with it but that is interesting to know – Pharabus May 20 '10 at 13:36
@Cladudio could you just throw in one line of code and your answer is perfect. Interesting information coming out of an interesting question... plus one? ;) – Seb Nilsson May 21 '10 at 9:34
@Seb Nilsson: code added! – Claudio Redi May 21 '10 at 11:58
Does this mean that a new Session is generated for each page request until the session object is accessed? – xr280xr Feb 27 '12 at 22:11
Interestingly enough, this fixes my issue - but the issue only manifested itself after about 6 months of using the codebase without a problem. I can't think of any reason why this would suddenly have changed - can anyone suggest a reason why the sessionid would suddenly get reset when it hadn't before? – Moo Mar 5 '12 at 15:47

There is another, more insidious reason, why this may occur even when the Session object has been initialized as demonstrated by Cladudio.

In the Web.config, if there is an <httpCookies> entry that is set to requireSSL="true" but you are not actually using HTTPS: for a specific request, then the session cookie is not sent (or maybe not returned, I'm not sure which) which means that you end up with a brand new session for each request.

I found this one the hard way, spending several hours going back and forth between several commits in my source control, until I found what specific change had broken my application.

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1  
An experience shared worth a vote up. Thanks! – Seb Nilsson Aug 19 '11 at 14:35
1  
Same here - this was catching me out! – rf_wilson Feb 20 at 14:47

Be sure that you do not have a session timeout that is very short, and also make sure that if you are using cookie based sessions that you are accepting the session.

The FireFox webDeveloperToolbar is helpful at times like this as you can see the cookies set for your application.

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1  
I am guessing my session timeout is not set to below one second. It changes with every rapid F5-press. – Seb Nilsson May 21 '10 at 9:32

Using Neville's answer (deleting requireSSL = true, in web.config) and slightly modifying Joel Etherton's code, here is the code that should handle a site that runs in both SSL mode and non SSL mode, depending on the user and the page (I am jumping back into code and haven't tested it on SSL yet, but expect it should work - will be too busy later to get back to this, so here it is:

if (HttpContext.Current.Response.Cookies.Count > 0)
        {
            foreach (string s in HttpContext.Current.Response.Cookies.AllKeys)
            {
                if (s == FormsAuthentication.FormsCookieName || s.ToLower() == "asp.net_sessionid")
                {
                    HttpContext.Current.Response.Cookies[s].Secure = HttpContext.Current.Request.IsSecureConnection;
                }
            }
        }
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In my case I figured out that the session cookie had a domain that included www. prefix, while I was requesting page with no www..
Adding www. to the URL immediately fixed the problem. Later I changed cookie's domain to be set to .mysite.com instead of www.mysite.com.

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