Permanent And Temporary Cookies; Cookie Formats - Nortel Web OS Switch Software Application Manual

Switch software
Table of Contents

Advertisement

The following topics discussing cookie-based persistence are detailed in this section:
n
"Permanent and Temporary Cookies" on page 425
n
"Cookie Formats" on page 425
n
"Cookie Properties" on page 426
n
"Client Browsers that Do Not Accept Cookies" on page 426
n
"Cookie Modes of Operation" on page 427
n
"Configuring Cookie-Based Persistence" on page 430

Permanent and Temporary Cookies

Cookies can either be permanent or temporary. A permanent cookie is stored on the client's
browser, as part of the response from a Web site's server. It will be sent by the browser when
the client makes subsequent requests to the same site, even after the browser has been shut
down. A temporary cookie is only valid for the current browser session. Similar to a SSL Ses-
sion-based ID, the temporary cookie expires when you shut down the browser. Based on RFC
2109, any cookie without an expiration date is a temporary cookie.

Cookie Formats

A cookie can be defined in the HTTP header (the recommended method) or placed in the URL
for hashing. The cookie is defined as a "Name=Value" pair and can appear along with other
parameters and cookies. For example, the cookie "SessionID=1234" can be represented in
one of the following ways:
n
In the HTTP Header
Cookie: SesssionID=1234
Cookie: ASP_SESSIONID=POIUHKJHLKHD
Cookie: name=john_smith
The second cookie represents an Active Server Page (ASP) session ID. The third cookie
represents an application-specific cookie that records the name of the client.
n
Within the URL
http://www.mysite.com/reservations/SessionID=1234
212777-A, February 2002
Web OS 10.0 Application Guide
Chapter 16: Persistence
n
425

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Web os 10.0

Table of Contents