Since HTTP driven applications are stateless, sessions provide a way to store information about the user across requests. Laravel ships with a variety of session back-ends available for use through a clean, unified API. Support for popular back-ends such as Memcached, Redis, and databases is included out of the box.
The session configuration file is stored at config/session.php
. Be sure to review the well documented options available to you in this file. By default, Laravel is configured to use the file
session driver, which will work well for many applications. In production applications, you may consider using the memcached
or redis
drivers for even faster session performance.
The session driver
defines where session data will be stored for each request. Laravel ships with several great drivers out of the box:
Note: The array driver is typically used for running tests to prevent session data from persisting.
When using the database
session driver, you will need to setup a table to contain the session items. Below is an example Schema
declaration for the table:
Schema::create('sessions', function ($table) {
$table->string('id')->unique();
$table->integer('user_id')->nullable();
$table->string('ip_address', 45)->nullable();
$table->text('user_agent')->nullable();
$table->text('payload');
$table->integer('last_activity');
});
You may use the session:table
Artisan command to generate this migration for you!
php artisan session:table
composer dump-autoload
php artisan migrate
Before using Redis sessions with Laravel, you will need to install the predis/predis
package (~1.0) via Composer.
The Laravel framework uses the flash
session key internally, so you should not add an item to the session by that name.
If you need all stored session data to be encrypted, set the encrypt
configuration option to true
.
First, let's access the session. We can access the session instance via the HTTP request, which can be type-hinted on a controller method. Remember, controller method dependencies are injected via the Laravel service container:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use App\Http\Controllers\Controller;
class UserController extends Controller
{
/**
* Show the profile for the given user.
*
* @param Request $request
* @param int $id
* @return Response
*/
public function showProfile(Request $request, $id)
{
$value = $request->session()->get('key');
//
}
}
When you retrieve a value from the session, you may also pass a default value as the second argument to the get
method. This default value will be returned if the specified key does not exist in the session. If you pass a Closure
as the default value to the get
method, the Closure
will be executed and its result returned:
$value = $request->session()->get('key', 'default');
$value = $request->session()->get('key', function() {
return 'default';
});
If you would like to retrieve all data from the session, you may use the all
method:
$data = $request->session()->all();
You may also use the global session
PHP function to retrieve and store data in the session:
Route::get('home', function () {
// Retrieve a piece of data from the session...
$value = session('key');
// Store a piece of data in the session...
session(['key' => 'value']);
});
The has
method may be used to check if an item exists in the session. This method will return true
if the item exists:
if ($request->session()->has('users')) {
//
}
Once you have access to the session instance, you may call a variety of functions to interact with the underlying data. For example, the put
method stores a new piece of data in the session:
$request->session()->put('key', 'value');
The push
method may be used to push a new value onto a session value that is an array. For example, if the user.teams
key contains an array of team names, you may push a new value onto the array like so:
$request->session()->push('user.teams', 'developers');
The pull
method will retrieve and delete an item from the session:
$value = $request->session()->pull('key', 'default');
The forget
method will remove a piece of data from the session. If you would like to remove all data from the session, you may use the flush
method:
$request->session()->forget('key');
$request->session()->flush();
If you need to regenerate the session ID, you may use the regenerate
method:
$request->session()->regenerate();
Sometimes you may wish to store items in the session only for the next request. You may do so using the flash
method. Data stored in the session using this method will only be available during the subsequent HTTP request, and then will be deleted. Flash data is primarily useful for short-lived status messages:
$request->session()->flash('status', 'Task was successful!');
If you need to keep your flash data around for even more requests, you may use the reflash
method, which will keep all of the flash data around for an additional request. If you only need to keep specific flash data around, you may use the keep
method:
$request->session()->reflash();
$request->session()->keep(['username', 'email']);
To add additional drivers to Laravel's session back-end, you may use the extend
method on the Session
facade. You can call the extend
method from the boot
method of a service provider:
<?php
namespace App\Providers;
use Session;
use App\Extensions\MongoSessionStore;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
class SessionServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
/**
* Perform post-registration booting of services.
*
* @return void
*/
public function boot()
{
Session::extend('mongo', function($app) {
// Return implementation of SessionHandlerInterface...
return new MongoSessionStore;
});
}
/**
* Register bindings in the container.
*
* @return void
*/
public function register()
{
//
}
}
Note that your custom session driver should implement the SessionHandlerInterface
. This interface contains just a few simple methods we need to implement. A stubbed MongoDB implementation looks something like this:
<?php
namespace App\Extensions;
class MongoHandler implements SessionHandlerInterface
{
public function open($savePath, $sessionName) {}
public function close() {}
public function read($sessionId) {}
public function write($sessionId, $data) {}
public function destroy($sessionId) {}
public function gc($lifetime) {}
}
Since these methods are not as readily understandable as the cache StoreInterface
, let's quickly cover what each of the methods do:
Once the session driver has been registered, you may use the mongo
driver in your config/session.php
configuration file.