PHP ─ CookiesCookies are text files stored on the client computer and they are kept of use tracking purpose. PHP transparently supports HTTP cookies. There are three steps involved in identifying returning users:
The Anatomy of a Cookie Cookies are usually set in an HTTP header (although JavaScript can also set a cookie directly on a browser). A PHP script that sets a cookie might send headers that look something like this:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Fri, 04 Feb 2000 21:03:38 GMT Server: Apache/1.3.9 (UNIX) PHP/4.0b3 Set-Cookie: name=xyz; expires=Friday, 04-Feb-07 22:03:38 GMT; path=/; domain=tutorialspoint.com Connection: close Content-Type: text/html As you can see, the Set-Cookie header contains a name value pair, a GMT date, a path and a domain. The name and value will be URL encoded. The expires field is an instruction to the browser to "forget" the cookie after the given time and date. If the browser is configured to store cookies, it will then keep this information until the expiry date. If the user points the browser at any page that matches the path and domain of the cookie, it will resend the cookie to the server. The browser's headers might look something like this:
GET / HTTP/1.0
Connection: Keep-Alive User-Agent: Mozilla/4.6 (X11; I; Linux 2.2.6-15apmac ppc) Host: zink.demon.co.uk:1126 PHP ─ Cookies Accept: image/gif, */* Accept-Encoding: gzip Accept-Language: en Accept-Charset: iso-8859-1,*,utf-8 Cookie: name=xyz A PHP script will then have access to the cookie in the environmental variables $_COOKIE or $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS[] which holds all cookie names and values. Above cookie can be accessed using $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS["name"]. Setting Cookies with PHP PHP provided setcookie() function to set a cookie. This function requires up to six arguments and should be called before <html> tag. For each cookie this function has to be called separately.
setcookie(name, value, expire, path, domain, security);
Here is the detail of all the arguments:
<?php
setcookie("name", "John Watkin", time()+3600, "/","", 0); setcookie("age", "36", time()+3600, "/", "", 0); ?> <html> <head> <title>Setting Cookies with PHP</title> </head> <body> <?php echo "Set Cookies"?> </body> </html> Accessing Cookies with PHP PHP provides many ways to access cookies. The simplest way is to use either $_COOKIE or $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS variables. The following example will access all the cookies set in above example.
<html>
<head> <title>Accessing Cookies with PHP</title> </head> <body> <?php echo $_COOKIE["name"]. "<br />"; /* is equivalent to */ echo $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS["name"]. "<br />"; echo $_COOKIE["age"] . "<br />"; /* is equivalent to */ echo $HTTP_COOKIE_VARS["name"] . "<br />"; ?> </body> </html> You can use isset() function to check if a cookie is set or not.
<html>
<head> <title>Accessing Cookies with PHP</title> </head> <body> <?php if( isset($_COOKIE["name"])) echo "Welcome " . $_COOKIE["name"] . "<br />"; else echo "Sorry... Not recognized" . "<br />"; ?> </body> </html> Deleting Cookie with PHP Officially, to delete a cookie you should call setcookie() with the name argument only but this does not always work well, however, and should not be relied on. It is safest to set the cookie with a date that has already expired:
<?php
setcookie( "name", "", time()- 60, "/","", 0); setcookie( "age", "", time()- 60, "/","", 0); ?> <html> <head> <title>Deleting Cookies with PHP</title> </head> <body> <?php echo "Deleted Cookies" ?> </body> </html> |