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From: <php...@li...> - 2010-08-30 19:20:49
|
Hi Jost,
My point is, is it possible to configure java_session(); such that
it returns a null when no session currently exists? Or is there any
function to determine whether a session already exists?
Thanks.
Regards,
Kok Hoor
Hi Kok,
> I am a newbie using php-java bridge. Is there any way to make any calls
> to Java to return session only if it exists, and not create a new one?
If JavaBridge.war back end is running in a servlet engine or JEE
server, the code:
<?php require_once("java/Java.inc");
java_session();
?>
uses an existing session or creates a new one, depending on whether
your browser(!) has sent a session cookie or not.
> The reason I ask is because, by default, our existing Java web does not
> create any session until after the user logs into our system.
java_session() (or session_start(), for that matters) should be called
before any response has been created. Furthermore, if an HTTP front-
and a JEE back-end is used, java_session() must be the first Java
statement in your PHP script. Otherwise you'll get an error message
that a session cannot be allocated (you won't get a session, not even
a new one).
It sounds as if your browser has cookies switched off, so that the
server tries to allocate a new session for each request.
Regards,
Jost Bökemeier
|
|
From: <php...@li...> - 2010-08-30 19:10:50
|
Hi Kok,
> I am a newbie using php-java bridge. Is there any way to make any calls
> to Java to return session only if it exists, and not create a new one?
If JavaBridge.war back end is running in a servlet engine or JEE
server, the code:
<?php require_once("java/Java.inc");
java_session();
?>
uses an existing session or creates a new one, depending on whether
your browser(!) has sent a session cookie or not.
> The reason I ask is because, by default, our existing Java web does not
> create any session until after the user logs into our system.
java_session() (or session_start(), for that matters) should be called
before any response has been created. Furthermore, if an HTTP front-
and a JEE back-end is used, java_session() must be the first Java
statement in your PHP script. Otherwise you'll get an error message
that a session cannot be allocated (you won't get a session, not even
a new one).
It sounds as if your browser has cookies switched off, so that the
server tries to allocate a new session for each request.
Regards,
Jost Bökemeier
|
|
From: <php...@li...> - 2010-08-30 18:28:55
|
Hi,
I am a newbie using php-java bridge. Is there any way to make any calls
to Java to return session only if it exists, and not create a new one?
The reason I ask is because, by default, our existing Java web does not
create any session until after the user logs into our system.
I have tried java_session(null,true) and java_session(null,false), but
regardless, a new session is created whether I like it or not. I even tried
calling $java_context()->getHttpServletResponse()->getSession(false), but an
exception is thrown.
I am using JavaBridgeTemplate621rc2.war
Thanks.
Regards,
Kok Hoor
|