- From: Magnus Mengelbier <magnusm@huygens.w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 1 Apr 1996 15:01:59 +0200 (MET DST)
- To: www-logging@w3.org
"James E. Calloway" <jcallowa@nando.net> on Fri, 29 Mar 1996 wrote >problems ... in the cookie approach to session ID? I believe problem with the current cookie spec is that it can not store cookie definitions between sessions. This can be both a positive and negative aspect. It does restrict sites from flooding your system with cookies to be stored across sessions which is good. The negative is that the client is not allowed to define cookies. One way to enable across session storage is to enable the client to define a cookie for any domain/path combination. It could be quite simple by having the client software read an init-file at start up. At the same time, I believe the client should be able to define and own cookies, say with a reserved domain "Internal". You can also create a global (read-only) cookie by introducing a permission attribute. If the two preceeding extensions are present, the client can generate (if the routine is added to the software) ID's and maintain ownership while making the information available to other domain/paths. I have been struggling with the idea of using a cookie in a logging scheme. The result is a method based on my own and some ideas that I have seen on the Net, currently called the LogTo collection method. An example in the LogTo document uses a cookie scheme using extensions to the current cookie spec. Magnus -- Document refs: An extended version of Netscape's cookie specification with the above mentioned additions: http://www.sbm.temple.edu/~magnus/ext_cookie_spec.html The LogTo collection method and an example of how a logging scheme using cookies can be implemented can be found in the document: http://www.sbm.temple.edu/~magnus/logto.html The current front door leading to the above documents: http://www.sbm.temple.edu/~magnus/measure.html ---------------------- Magnus Mengelbier Sweden + (0)40-29 39 12 email: magnusm@maths.lth.se magnusm@ibm.net
Received on Monday, 1 April 1996 08:03:14 UTC