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Hi all

We're developing a web shop, and process payments with a third party UI.

We have chosen to show the payment UI inside an iframe inside out check-out page, even though (we now realize), the payment solution provider recommend using a top-level window.

Now what happens is that in IE7/IE8, the payment UI loses session state on the first postback (inside the iframe), while in Firefox, it works just fine. We observe that the payment UI is developed using ASP.NET.

I was under the impression that as far as the server is concerned, there is no difference between being referenced from an iframe versus from a top-level window, but clearly there is.

Does anyone have a clue? What does an iframe do that could possibly make a difference to the payment server, causing it to lose session state?

Could it (it suddenly dawns on me) be differences in cookie handling? Stricter security perhaps?

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3 Answers

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Probably caused by this:

Internet Explorer 6 introduced support for the Platform for Privacy Preferences (P3P) Project. The P3P standard notes that if a FRAMESET or a parent window references another site inside a FRAME or inside a child window, the child site is considered third party content. Internet Explorer, which uses the default privacy setting of Medium, silently rejects cookies sent from third party sites.

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/323752/en-us

I once heard someone say that an IFrame is actually a new instance of IE, but apparently it's a bit more complicated.

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Dang! That might just be it! Back to the drawing board.. – Tor Haugen Apr 17 at 9:53
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You can fix this by ensuring that both you and the payment provider have a P3P statement defined: this will allow IE to accept the third party cookies - had to do similar things when IE 6 came out for ads served in an IFrame from a remote ad server. – Zhaph - Ben Duguid Apr 17 at 10:54
Thanks, I'll check that out! – Tor Haugen Apr 20 at 9:31
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Hi, so the structure of your code/site would be something like:

  1. Site A has Page 1 has an iframe which displays Site B
  2. the iframe updates and now displays Page 2 from Site A

and when you right-click on the contents of the iframe you can verify that the url is corresponding to Site A?

If you debug, does Page 2 fire off your breakpoints as expected?

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No. Site A page 1 is displayed all the time. Inside Site A page 1 is an iframe which displays site B page 1. Site B page 1 posts back (inside the iframe) to Site B page 2. Now Site B page 2 has no session state. – Tor Haugen Apr 17 at 9:49
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You might find this article by Milan Negovan helpful to explain why framed pages get a separate Session ID. The article also talks about the P3P solution mentioned by Gerrie Schenck above.

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+1 for the P3P references - very useful. – Zhaph - Ben Duguid Apr 17 at 10:58

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