Hi friends, is there a good idea to keep a persistant session without cookie enabled? Actually my PHP file is not visited by a browser but a Windows Desktop Application, and the developer said to me that it is hard to simulate cookie in his application.
@pluto but based on your question, if a Windows application access the file, does it access it via the browser? Cause there's no point for sessions if no browser is involved
hey @ShyamK; so, when's your mysql_* supported applications gonna crash? :P
@Sam It doesn't access via browser, actually it generate a form data with Visual Basic 6.0 and post it to server over HTTP. and then the server responds it in JSON or XML.
@sam sorry to trouble you again. :) I think I could generate an MD5ed string as the session key and stored it in database after a successful login validation and send it back to the client. Every time the client sends a request, the session key must be post together. is it a proper idea?
@pluto you can try what you suggested earlier; or you can have a column in a login table (or whatever table you check for login) with a boolean datatype; if the user is logged in, the column is true, and it turns false when the user logs out; that removes the need for Sessions
@tomexsans I think I should have a clear thinking and persuade the windows application developer before start. :)
@tomexsans actually what I want to do is just to simulate a session/cookie mechanism. Just bring the session id from request header to request payload.
@PeeHaa reading your ping from yesterday, was AFK, sorry. Tight shedule these days. I'll setup a heroku for the new github cv-pls org so the control is spread.
@hakre No worries. If you have time to just upload the latest version of the plugin and send me the link so I can test the auto update functionality that would be great.
@Sam I'll like an expert answer too on that question; currently though, I manually download the files, and use CPanel for the db, although, I'm reading up on mysqldump for the db