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TVK
TVK
23:00
And yes, even after sending a header redirect, you could still execute PHP code afterwards and even print more (obsolete) stuff.
m59
m59
Would it be awful for an api to use sessions rather than be stateless? Is stateless just a bonus?
TVK
TVK
APIs are usually used by other pieces of software that won't allow sessions to be kept anyway.
m59
m59
ah.
TVK
TVK
So relying on sessions would likely break things.
@m59 http is stateless that is why session is needed
23:02
try
{
	throw new Exception('Some error');
}
catch (Exception $e)
{
	header('Location: ......')
	exit;
}
finally
{
	echo "Hello World\n";
}
echo "Goodbye World\n";
@crypticツ what's up (sorry just seeing)
@TVK depends on the design ? Sometime you can auth first return sessionKey then use key to do bulk transaction avoid authentication all the time
so in this example Hello World will print but not Goodbye World, correct?
yay shiny!
:P
yay :)
23:03
	try
	{
		throw new Exception('Some error');
	}
	catch (Exception $e)
	{
	 	// Log Error
	}
	finally
	{
		header('Location: ......');
		exit;
	}
TVK
TVK
@Baba Yeah, true. You could build your API to require to use the client to have some session support. Though I meant that be default, sessions aren't being kept so it would require extra effort on the client's side.
But for 80's style, please use yellow, purple and cyan colors :) (next to light green ^^)
TVK
TVK
@crypticツ Only the header would be sent.
@hakre :D
m59
m59
@TVK actually, I'm lost about that. Are you saying that whatever is calling my api may not be able to use cookies?
TVK
TVK
23:04
@crypticツ exit will quit the execution. Replacing the exit for a return (in case of a function) would print hello but not goodbye.
@TVK Not really extra because in some cases to achieve speed that might be the best approach
TVK
TVK
@m59 Whatever is calling your API generally isn't a browser so it might not natively have cookie support. If your API requires cookies, you're forcing your users to build such a system if they don't have it yet, making it more of a hassle to use the API.
@PeeHaa Did you design that ?
@Baba yes. Sort of
not good?
@PeeHaa cool send me the link
23:07
@crypticツ Yeah, who runs after Ex'es? Probably when getting drunk with them it can happen something happens, but I mean running after nobody likes that I'd say.
TVK
TVK
@Baba Yeah, there are good uses for them. They're just not something that should be used if they don't provide a noticeable improvement.
@PeeHaa We need to add come js chart to make it look realtime :)
m59
m59
@TKV got it...I can't quite see what to do instead. Right now, I pull the info from the database and check if it requires any auth level greater than 0 (public), if so, I need to check the requester's auth level and compare. So, what does that look like? What am I checking (from where)?
@TVK valid
23:08
@hakre I like to practice avoiding drama in the first place =oP
@Baba I thought about adding a database so you can see what the cache does / did. But I don't want a dependency on a db. So I just settled on the current state of the cache. I will implement an "autorefresher" so the charts should become "realtime" with a minor delay
@PeeHaa +1 star
Yay! A stargazer!! :D
TVK
TVK
@m59 In that case I'd let them send the auth info each time. In my eyes, adding an additional request for authenticating to then send the returned key each time is not worth the extra hassle.
@PeeHaa I agree with @hakre ... green and red is bad
23:12
@Baba Feel free to suggest a color scheme
@PeeHaa can i give you a another green and red to try .. one moment
sure
@crypticツ you can not always avoid the drama :)
E_MISSING_HEX
23:15
@PeeHaa lol
m59
m59
@TKV well, I have it separate from the api at the moment, but I do have a persistent login system already in place that uses two tokens. Is that the kind of thing you mean by "returned key"? So they would send the user/pw in the request data each time? How can a system securely keep sending that stuff without the user entering it each time themselves?
BTW I also need a third color
m59
m59
Thanks for bearing with me, lol.
Finally is *not* triggered with `exit` in the catch: http://3v4l.org/nrREh
But it is with `return`: http://3v4l.org/9CeVX
@PeeHaa #bce02e , #e0642e
@PeeHaa ok one moment let me see a color that would match those 2
TVK
TVK
23:17
@m59 With "returned key" I meant the session key. APIs generally aren't for users themselves though. They're for software, which can automatically supply the auth info.
For me both wouldn't qualify as like the PHP docs describe, but perhaps that's because they are new.
TVK
TVK
@m59 Or do you mean that the credentials the user provides is used for communication with the API?
m59
m59
yes, because it would be a matter of if that user (registered with me) is allowed to look at that. @TKV
@PeeHaa #bce02e , #e0642e , #2e97e0 , #ec4ea0 , #d9cc3b
better?
TVK
TVK
23:21
@m59 That could be a valid case for having the API return a session key that can be used for authenticating in future requests yeah. You could also save the credentials for API use, though that sounds a bit risky to me; having the password available in readable format throughout the session. (Also, my username is TVK rather than TKV if you're trying to ping me.)
m59
m59
LOLLllll
good call @TVK
@PeeHaa Nice .... much more better .. its cool
kk tnx
m59
m59
Yeah, it sounds like the 2 key format I'm using for persistent-login is the way to go @TVK
@PeeHaa am sure you can see the colors are better
23:23
@Baba Nope. I am a developer I only see in grayscale binary
TVK
TVK
@PeeHaa That has to be difficult when reading pie charts with an uneven number of colours.
@PeeHaa Look at it now
Looks the same to me ;)
@PeeHaa what ???? Really ???
TVK
TVK
@PeeHaa The first one burns. ;_;
23:26
neh j/k
@TVK thank you
We need the summer people c'mon
word?
@PeeHaa lol
@ircmaxell If you've got the time, I would like to hear your opinion on this question and its answers:
43
Q: "Keep Me Logged In" - the best approach

MatthewMy web application uses sessions to store information about the user once they've logged in, and to maintain that information as they travel from page to page within the app. In this specific application, I'm storing the user_id, first_name and last_name of the person. I'd like to offer a "Keep M...

23:29
@PeeHaa whi str_replace(array('+', '"', '\'', '\\', '/', '=', '?', '&'), '', base64_encode($token));
@Jasper cookieHash==databaseHash==md5(salt+username+ip+salt) is scarp
Personally, I found the second answer's two links a very interesting read, but I am aware that I don't know enough about it to find more than basic security flaws in the method given
@Baba That's what you get when stealing something from somebody and after that stealing it from another script
@Jasper Better but it can still be improved especially jaspan.com/improved_persistent_login_cookie_best_practice
@PeeHaa lol .. have written something similar before stackoverflow.com/a/17199726/1226894 just curios why you not not use bin2hex instead
@Jasper eih...
@Baba How can it be improved upon?
23:34
@Baba Might as well do that now
I'll write a new answer once I finish responding to this email
@Jasper When the victim next accesses the web site, he will be informed that the theft occurred. can you see you only know about the attack only after the next login
@PeeHaa cool
@ircmaxell Thanks!
@Baba I see that. Are you saying it can be improved in a way that you know about a theft even before the next login?
@Jasper yeap ...
@Baba sounds cool. I really have no idea on how to go about that, though
23:40
@Jasper you just need to trick the attacker .. simple
@Baba trick him how?
@Jasper Use 2 secure HTTPS httponly cookies. 99% of the time they only steal one
m59
m59
dudes, if I have the primary key of my users table as the username (rather than the id) and then I'm storing the users' settings in another table, with the primary key of username, this is going to break if the user changes his username. Is the only solution to get the user's id (unique and AI) and consider the link that way?
I'm assuming MYSQL won't auto-update things like that for me.
@m59 strings as primary keys? that doesn't sound like a good idea
@Baba nifty
m59
m59
I have a reason. It lets me identify which key is used by the api
users/johnny = the api looks up table users primary key (name) and then finds the row with "johnny"
This let's me specify which column the api is going to work with.
23:53
@Jasper that is just the simple trick
@Jasper google uses it
@m59 I don't really understand what you're trying to do, but I suppose using a string as primary key may be the right way to go if you know the pros and cons
m59
m59
Yeah, I'm pretty sure about that, but I am not familiar with joins/relational databases enough to have figured out the next step. What I am trying to do now is find the best way of storing/retrieving rows from other tables for that user
noight all
m59
m59
night!
@PeeHaa have a lovely night rest
23:59
@Baba fair enough. I'm going to head off to bed now, read @ircmaxell's answer tomorrow and ask you about any tricks he missed afterwards (if you don't mind, that is)
almost done with it

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