2

I have an application that has user management using sessions.Under the root folder of the application I have an admin panel which I need to have different session as otherwise it conflicts with the root session.

-root
   -admin/adminFiles
   -rootFiles

I went through this thread and also the docs and tried the below code in my admin folder

if(HTTP_SERVER != 'http://localhost'){
    session_save_path("/tmp");
}
 session_name('session_for_admin');
 ini_set('session.cookie_path','/session_for_admin');
 session_set_cookie_params(60*60*24*5,'session_for_admin');
 session_start();

This just does not start the session.No error in the logs too. What am I doing wrong here.

I want to do it this way because the admin folder is just going to be accessed by a few privileged users and not very frequently. I am aware that session_name() adds and overhead.But would like to get through it this way.

9
  • Am I crazy or don't you need to have session_start before you can even check for the $_SESSION variable?
    – dmgig
    Jul 30, 2014 at 15:03
  • oops!! thank you for the pointer! Actually I copied it from a different file not the actual file where the session is first set.Updated
    – KillABug
    Jul 30, 2014 at 16:08
  • how is this supposed to actually react in different ways to anything? this will use session_for_admin everytime, won't it? Jul 30, 2014 at 16:19
  • Will it?If I set it inside the admin folder,the root folder will have the defalt session PHPSESSID right?
    – KillABug
    Jul 30, 2014 at 16:25
  • @FélixGagnon-Grenier Can you please suggest the right way!
    – KillABug
    Jul 30, 2014 at 17:54

2 Answers 2

1

so in regard to what you say about having an admin flag in your database:

let's say that $admin contains a boolean: true if your database confirmed the user as an admin, false if it's not

this will activate the session with name based on the result of this boolean:

if ($admin)
 {session_name('session_for_admin');}
else
 {session_name('session_for_others');}
session_start();

this will start and manage two different sessions, in the same way that two different users will have their own session.

admittedly from there you may want to do other things such as changing the working directory, or include different files.

Which you could also do by just setting a variable in your session when the user is logged in as admin:

$_SESSION['admin'] = true;

from then on, you can check and use some files or other like this:

if ($_SESSION['admin'])
 {// use files in admin folder
  }
else
 {// use files in root folder
  }
1
  • I had actually already tried that but did not work as well,my session is returned as null.Is there anything in the configuration that I need to change?I mean in the php.in. if($value['adminAuthFlag'] === '1'){ session_name('session_gobiggi_admin'); ini_set('session.cookie_path','/session_gobiggi_admin'); session_set_cookie_params(60*60*24*5,'session_gobiggi_admin'); session_start(); }
    – KillABug
    Jul 31, 2014 at 6:52
0

Try using session_name before you start the session For example, in the first domain, use

session_name("AdminPanel");
session_start();

In the second domain, use

session_name("WebsiteID");
session_start();

For more visit session name

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