Description
Adds $_SESSION
functionality to WordPress, leveraging the database where needed to power multi-server installations.
Every visitor, logged in or not, will be issued a session. Session data will be stored in the WordPress database by default
to deal with load balancing issues if multiple application servers are being used. In addition, the session collection will
also be stored in memory for rapid use within WordPress.
Session data stored in the database can be encrypted at rest for better security.
Installation
Manual Installation
- Upload the entire
/wp-session-manager
folder to the/wp-content/plugins/
directory. - Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in WordPress.
- Use
$_SESSION
in your code.
FAQ
- How do I add session variables?
-
Merely use the superglobal
$_SESSION
array:$_SESSION['user_name'] = 'User Name'; // A string $_SESSION['user_contact'] = array( 'email' => '[email protected]' ); // An array $_SESSION['user_obj'] = new WP_User( 1 ); // An object
- How long do session variables live?
-
This depends on your PHP installation’s configuration. Please read the PHP manual
for more details on configuration. - Can I use this plugin without creating new tables?
-
Absolutely! As of version 2.0, this plugin will create a new table for WordPress to store session data. In general, this is more efficient long-term than using options for data storage. However, if your system does not allow creating a table, add the following to
wp-config.php
to use the options table instead:define( 'WP_SESSION_USE_OPTIONS', true );
- I get an error saying my PHP version is out of date. Why?
-
PHP 5.6 was designated end-of-life and stopped receiving security patches in December 2018. PHP 7.0 was also marked end-of-life in December 2018. The minimum version of PHP supported by WP Session Manager is now PHP 7.1.
If your server is running an older version of PHP, the session system will not work! To avoid triggering a PHP error, the plugin will instead output this notice to upgrade and disable itself silently. You won’t see a PHP error, but you also won’t get session support.
Reach out to your hosting provider or system administrator to upgrade your server.
- I get an error saying another plugin is setting up a session. What can I do?
-
WP Session Manager overrides PHP’s default session implementation with its own custom handler. Unfortunately, we can’t swap in a new handler if a session is already active. This plugin hooks into the
plugins_loaded
hook to set things up as early as possible, but if you have code in another plugin (or your theme) that attempts to invokesession_start()
before WP Session Manager loads, then the custom handler won’t work at all.Inspect your other plugins and try to find the one that’s interfering. Then, reach out to the developer to explain the conflict and see if they have a fix.
Reviews
Contributors & Developers
“WP Session Manager” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.
Contributors“WP Session Manager” has been translated into 1 locale. Thank you to the translators for their contributions.
Translate “WP Session Manager” into your language.
Interested in development?
Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.
Changelog
4.2.0
- Update: Change donate link to Patreon vs PayPal.
- Fix: Disable the initialization routine for cron runs.
4.1.1
- Fix: Defensively protect deprecated functions with
function_exists()
checks to avoid conflicts with other systems. - Fix: Disable the initialization routine if sessions are disabled.
4.1.0
- Fix: Add some defense to ensure end users are running the correct version of PHP before loading the system.
- Fix: Eliminate a race condition where another plugin or the theme created the session first.
- Fix: Schedule a cron to auto-delete expired sessions.
4.0.0
- New: Add an object cache based handler to leverage Redis or Memcached if available for faster queries.
- New: Adopt the Contributor Covenant (v1.4) as the project’s official code of conduct.
- Update: Bump minimum PHP requirements due to out-of-date version deprecations.
- Fix: Correct a race condition where a session was created before the database table existed.
- Fix: Correct a race condition where the
$wpdb
global is not yet set when a session is deleted from the database. - Fix: Remove unnecessary integer session ID from the stored data table.
3.0.4
- Update: Add support for the
wp_install
hook to create custom table immediately.
3.0.3
- Fix: Repair code blocks in the readme
- Fix: Use a more defensive approach to starting sessions in the event another plugin has started one already
3.0.2
- Fix: Add back in proper array access support for the deprecated
WP_Session
object.
3.0.1
- Update: Pull a Sessionz fix
3.0.0
- Update: Refactor to use Sessionz
- Update: Add encryption at rest if
WP_SESSION_ENC_KEY
is set
2.0.2
- Fix: Wire the data storage migration to a session init hook to ensure it runs.
- Fix: Clean up sessions when all data is removed.
2.0.1
- Fix: Repair data storage that was not returning actual stored session data.
2.0.0
- Update: Use a table instead of options for storing session data.
1.2.2
- Update: Use regex pattern matching to ensure session IDs are identical going in/out of the DB to account for encoding differences
1.2.1
- Update: Additional filters for the
setcookie
parameters - Update: Expose the Session ID publicly
- Fix: Better handling for malformed or broken session names
1.2.0
- Update: Enhanced plugin organization
- Update: Added WP_CLI support for session management
- Update: Add Composer definitions
- Fix: Break up the deletion of old sessions so queries don’t time out under load
1.1.2
- Fix a race condition where session expiration options could accidentally be set to autoload
- Make the garbage collection routine run hourly to alleviate long-running tasks on larger sites
1.1.1
- Fix a bug where session expiration was not properly set upon instantiation
1.1
- Implement Recursive_ArrayAccess to provide multidimensional array support
- Better expiration for session data
- Implement garbage collection to keep the database clean
1.0.2
- Switch to object persistence rather than transients
1.0.1
- Changes implementation to avoid the use of a global variable (still registered for convenience)
1.0
- First version