One approach would be to check to see if your session has expired for any ashx in your global.asax file. If it has, return a json session expired object. On the client side, you would then check to see if that object exists and redirect the user to the login page via javascript.
So in your global.asax file you would have something like the following:
protected void Application_AcquireRequestState(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
var url = HttpContext.Current.Request.Url.OriginalString;
var extension = Path.GetExtension(url);
if (extension == ".ashx" && HttpContext.Current.Session.Contents.Count == 0)
{
HttpContext.Current.Response.StatusCode = 440;
HttpContext.Current.Response.TrySkipIisCustomErrors = true;
HttpContext.Current.Response.Write(new JObject(new JProperty("sessionExpired")).ToString());
HttpContext.Current.Response.End();
}
}
Then you would create a global ajax event error handler for all of your ajax queries that looks for the "sessionExpired" object:
$(document).ajaxError(function (event, xhr, settings)
{
if (xhr.responseText && $.parseJSON(xhr.responseText).sessionExpired)
{
window.location.replace("loginUrl.aspx");
return;
}
});
The good thing about this approach is that you only have to have these two snippets of code in order to get reasonable session expiration handling. However, there is a downside to this approach:
All of your ashx files must at least have the IReadOnlySessionState or IRequiresSessionState interfaces. Otherwise, the session expired logic will be triggered since the session will be assumed to be null. If you don't want this, then you need a way to exclude certain .ashx files, such as excluding any urls that contain a certain path that contains your ashx files.
In addition, if there are certain parts of your page that do not involve using the session, then you will need to exclude those pages as well.