@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.
@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.
@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.
@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)?
@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
@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.
@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?
@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.
@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.)
My 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...
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
@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
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 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
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
@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)