$ npm install express-session
var express = require('express')
var session = require('express-session')
var app = express()
app.use(session({secret: 'keyboard cat'}))
Setup session store with the given options
.
Session data is not saved in the cookie itself, just the session ID.
name
- cookie name (formerly known askey
). (default:'connect.sid'
)store
- session store instance.secret
- session cookie is signed with this secret to prevent tampering.cookie
- session cookie settings.- (default:
{ path: '/', httpOnly: true, secure: false, maxAge: null }
)
- (default:
genid
- function to call to generate a new session ID. (default: usesuid2
library)rolling
- forces a cookie set on every response. This resets the expiration date. (default:false
)resave
- forces session to be saved even when unmodified. (default:true
)proxy
- trust the reverse proxy when setting secure cookies (via "x-forwarded-proto" header). When set totrue
, the "x-forwarded-proto" header will be used. When set tofalse
, all headers are ignored. When left unset, will use the "trust proxy" setting from express. (default:undefined
)saveUninitialized
- forces a session that is "uninitialized" to be saved to the store. A session is uninitialized when it is new but not modified. This is useful for implementing login sessions, reducing server storage usage, or complying with laws that require permission before setting a cookie. (default:true
)unset
- controls result of unsettingreq.session
(throughdelete
, setting tonull
, etc.). This can be "keep" to keep the session in the store but ignore modifications or "destroy" to destroy the stored session. (default:'keep'
)signature
- pass in your own cookie signing object/module here that implements the sign(value, secret) and unsign(value, secret) functions (default:node-cookie-signature
module)
Generate a custom session ID for new sessions. Provide a function that returns a string that will be used as a session ID. The function is given req
as the first argument if you want to use some value attached to req
when generating the ID.
NOTE be careful you generate unique IDs so your sessions do not conflict.
app.use(session({
genid: function(req) {
return genuuid(); // use UUIDs for session IDs
},
secret: 'keyboard cat'
}))
Please note that secure: true
is a recommended option. However, it requires an https-enabled website, i.e., HTTPS is necessary for secure cookies.
If secure
is set, and you access your site over HTTP, the cookie will not be set. If you have your node.js behind a proxy and are using secure: true
, you need to set "trust proxy" in express:
var app = express()
app.set('trust proxy', 1) // trust first proxy
app.use(session({
secret: 'keyboard cat',
cookie: { secure: true }
}))
For using secure cookies in production, but allowing for testing in development, the following is an example of enabling this setup based on NODE_ENV
in express:
var app = express()
var sess = {
secret: 'keyboard cat',
cookie: {}
}
if (app.get('env') === 'production') {
app.set('trust proxy', 1) // trust first proxy
sess.cookie.secure = true // serve secure cookies
}
app.use(session(sess))
By default cookie.maxAge
is null
, meaning no "expires" parameter is set
so the cookie becomes a browser-session cookie. When the user closes the
browser the cookie (and session) will be removed.
To store or access session data, simply use the request property req.session
,
which is (generally) serialized as JSON by the store, so nested objects
are typically fine. For example below is a user-specific view counter:
app.use(session({ secret: 'keyboard cat', cookie: { maxAge: 60000 }}))
app.use(function(req, res, next) {
var sess = req.session
if (sess.views) {
sess.views++
res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/html')
res.write('<p>views: ' + sess.views + '</p>')
res.write('<p>expires in: ' + (sess.cookie.maxAge / 1000) + 's</p>')
res.end()
} else {
sess.views = 1
res.end('welcome to the session demo. refresh!')
}
})
To regenerate the session simply invoke the method, once complete
a new SID and Session
instance will be initialized at req.session
.
req.session.regenerate(function(err) {
// will have a new session here
})
Destroys the session, removing req.session
, will be re-generated next request.
req.session.destroy(function(err) {
// cannot access session here
})
Reloads the session data.
req.session.reload(function(err) {
// session updated
})
req.session.save(function(err) {
// session saved
})
Updates the .maxAge
property. Typically this is
not necessary to call, as the session middleware does this for you.
Each session has a unique cookie object accompany it. This allows
you to alter the session cookie per visitor. For example we can
set req.session.cookie.expires
to false
to enable the cookie
to remain for only the duration of the user-agent.
Alternatively req.session.cookie.maxAge
will return the time
remaining in milliseconds, which we may also re-assign a new value
to adjust the .expires
property appropriately. The following
are essentially equivalent
var hour = 3600000
req.session.cookie.expires = new Date(Date.now() + hour)
req.session.cookie.maxAge = hour
For example when maxAge
is set to 60000
(one minute), and 30 seconds
has elapsed it will return 30000
until the current request has completed,
at which time req.session.touch()
is called to reset req.session.maxAge
to its original value.
req.session.cookie.maxAge // => 30000
Every session store must implement the following methods
.get(sid, callback)
.set(sid, session, callback)
.destroy(sid, callback)
Recommended methods include, but are not limited to:
.length(callback)
.clear(callback)
For an example implementation view the connect-redis repo.