Zend_Http_Cookie and Zend_Http_CookieJar
Introduction
Zend_Http_Cookie, as expected, is a class that represents an
HTTP cookie. It provides methods for parsing HTTP
response strings, collecting cookies, and easily accessing their properties. It also
allows checking if a cookie matches against a specific scenario, IE
a request URL, expiration time, secure connection, etc.
Zend_Http_CookieJar is an object usually used by
Zend_Http_Client to hold a set of
Zend_Http_Cookie objects. The idea is that if a
Zend_Http_CookieJar object is attached to a
Zend_Http_Client object, all cookies going from and into the
client through HTTP requests and responses will be stored by the
CookieJar object. Then, when the client will send another request, it will first ask the
CookieJar object for all cookies matching the request. These will be added to the
request headers automatically. This is highly useful in cases where you need to
maintain a user session over consecutive HTTP requests, automatically
sending the session ID cookies when required. Additionally, the
Zend_Http_CookieJar object can be serialized and stored in
$_SESSION when needed.
Instantiating Zend_Http_Cookie Objects
Instantiating a Cookie object can be done in two ways:
-
Through the constructor, using the following syntax:
new Zend_Http_Cookie(string $name, string
$value, string $domain, [int $expires, [string $path, [boolean
$secure]]]);
-
$name: The name of the cookie (eg. 'PHPSESSID')
(required)
-
$value: The value of the cookie (required)
-
$domain: The cookie's domain (eg. '.example.com')
(required)
-
$expires: Cookie expiration time, as UNIX time
stamp (optional, defaults to NULL). If not set,
cookie will be treated as a 'session cookie' with no expiration
time.
-
$path: Cookie path, eg. '/foo/bar/' (optional,
defaults to '/')
-
$secure: Boolean, Whether the cookie is to be
sent over secure (HTTPS) connections only (optional, defaults to
boolean FALSE)
-
By calling the fromString($cookieStr, [$refUri, [$encodeValue]]) static
method, with a cookie string as represented in the 'Set-Cookie
' HTTP response header or 'Cookie' HTTP
request header. In this case, the cookie value must already be encoded. When
the cookie string does not contain a 'domain' part, you must provide a
reference URI according to which the cookie's domain and
path will be set.
The fromString() method accepts the following
parameters:
-
$cookieStr: a cookie string as represented in the
'Set-Cookie' HTTP response header or 'Cookie'
HTTP request header (required)
-
$refUri: a reference URI
according to which the cookie's domain and path will be set.
(optional, defaults to parsing the value from the $cookieStr)
-
$encodeValue: If the value should be passed
through urldecode. Also effects the cookie's behavior when being
converted back to a cookie string. (optional, defaults to true)
Example #1 Instantiating a Zend_Http_Cookie object
// First, using the constructor. This cookie will expire in 2 hours
$cookie = new Zend_Http_Cookie('foo',
'bar',
'.example.com',
'/path');
// You can also take the HTTP response Set-Cookie header and use it.
// This cookie is similar to the previous one, only it will not expire, and
// will only be sent over secure connections
$cookie = Zend_Http_Cookie::fromString('foo=bar; domain=.example.com; ' .
'path=/path; secure');
// If the cookie's domain is not set, you have to manually specify it
$cookie = Zend_Http_Cookie::fromString('foo=bar; secure;',
'http://www.example.com/path');
Note:
When instantiating a cookie object using the
Zend_Http_Cookie::fromString() method, the cookie value
is expected to be URL encoded, as cookie strings should be.
However, when using the constructor, the cookie value string is expected to be
the real, decoded value.
A cookie object can be transferred back into a string, using the __toString() magic
method. This method will produce a HTTP request "Cookie" header
string, showing the cookie's name and value, and terminated by a semicolon (';').
The value will be URL encoded, as expected in a Cookie header:
Example #2 Stringifying a Zend_Http_Cookie object
// Create a new cookie
$cookie = new Zend_Http_Cookie('foo',
'two words',
'.example.com',
'/path');
// Will print out 'foo=two+words;' :
echo $cookie->__toString ();
// This is actually the same:
// In PHP 5.2 and higher, this also works:
Zend_Http_Cookie getter methods
Once a Zend_Http_Cookie object is instantiated, it provides
several getter methods to get the different properties of the HTTP
cookie:
-
getName(): Get the name of the cookie
-
getValue(): Get the real, decoded value of the
cookie
-
getDomain(): Get the cookie's domain
-
getPath(): Get the cookie's path, which defaults
to '/'
-
getExpiryTime(): Get the cookie's expiration time,
as UNIX time stamp. If the cookie has no expiration time set, will return
NULL.
Additionally, several boolean tester methods are provided:
-
isSecure(): Check whether the cookie is set to be
sent over secure connections only. Generally speaking, if
TRUE the cookie should only be sent over
HTTPS.
-
isExpired(int $time = null): Check whether the cookie
is expired or not. If the cookie has no expiration time, will always return
TRUE. If $time is provided, it will override the
current time stamp as the time to check the cookie against.
-
isSessionCookie(): Check whether the cookie is a
"session cookie" - that is a cookie with no expiration time, which is meant
to expire when the session ends.
Example #3 Using getter methods with Zend_Http_Cookie
// First, create the cookie
$cookie =
Zend_Http_Cookie::fromString('foo=two+words; ' +
'domain=.example.com; ' +
'path=/somedir; ' +
'secure; ' +
'expires=Wednesday, 28-Feb-05 20:41:22 UTC');
echo $cookie-> getName(); // Will echo 'foo'
echo $cookie-> getValue(); // will echo 'two words'
echo $cookie-> getDomain(); // Will echo '.example.com'
echo $cookie-> getPath(); // Will echo '/'
echo date('Y-m-d', $cookie-> getExpiryTime());
// Will echo '2005-02-28'
echo ($cookie-> isExpired() ? 'Yes' : 'No');
// Will echo 'Yes'
echo ($cookie-> isExpired(strtotime('2005-01-01') ? 'Yes' : 'No');
// Will echo 'No'
echo ($cookie-> isSessionCookie() ? 'Yes' : 'No');
// Will echo 'No'
Zend_Http_Cookie: Matching against a scenario
The only real logic contained in a Zend_Http_Cookie object, is in
the match() method. This method is used to test a cookie against a given
HTTP request scenario, in order to tell whether the cookie should be
sent in this request or not. The method has the following syntax and parameters:
Zend_Http_Cookie->match(mixed $uri, [boolean $matchSessionCookies, [int
$now]]);
-
$uri: A Zend_Uri_Http object
with a domain name and path to be checked. Optionally, a string representing
a valid HTTP URL can be passed
instead. The cookie will match if the URL's scheme (HTTP
or HTTPS), domain and path all match.
-
$matchSessionCookies: Whether session cookies should be
matched or not. Defaults to TRUE. If set to
FALSE, cookies with no expiration time will never
match.
-
$now: Time (represented as UNIX time stamp) to check a
cookie against for expiration. If not specified, will default to the current
time.
Example #4 Matching cookies
// Create the cookie object - first, a secure session cookie
$cookie = Zend_Http_Cookie::fromString('foo=two+words; ' +
'domain=.example.com; ' +
'path=/somedir; ' +
'secure;');
$cookie->match('https://www.example.com/somedir/foo.php');
// Will return true
$cookie->match('http://www.example.com/somedir/foo.php');
// Will return false, because the connection is not secure
$cookie->match('https://otherexample.com/somedir/foo.php');
// Will return false, because the domain is wrong
$cookie->match('https://example.com/foo.php');
// Will return false, because the path is wrong
$cookie->match('https://www.example.com/somedir/foo.php', false);
// Will return false, because session cookies are not matched
$cookie->match('https://sub.domain.example.com/somedir/otherdir/foo.php');
// Will return true
// Create another cookie object - now, not secure, with expiration time
// in two hours
$cookie = Zend_Http_Cookie::fromString('foo=two+words; ' +
'domain=www.example.com; ' +
'expires='
$cookie->match('http://www.example.com/');
// Will return true
$cookie->match('https://www.example.com/');
// Will return true - non secure cookies can go over secure connections
// as well!
$cookie->match('http://subdomain.example.com/');
// Will return false, because the domain is wrong
$cookie-> match('http://www.example.com/', true, time() + (3 * 3600));
// Will return false, because we added a time offset of +3 hours to
// current time
The Zend_Http_CookieJar Class: Instantiation
In most cases, there is no need to directly instantiate a
Zend_Http_CookieJar object. If you want to attach a new cookie
jar to your Zend_Http_Client object, just call the
Zend_Http_Client->setCookieJar() method, and a new, empty cookie jar
will be attached to your client. You could later get this cookie jar
using Zend_Http_Client->getCookieJar().
If you still wish to manually instantiate a CookieJar object, you
can do so by calling "new Zend_Http_CookieJar()" directly - the
constructor method does not take any parameters. Another way to
instantiate a CookieJar object is to use the static Zend_Http_CookieJar::fromResponse()
method. This method takes two parameters: a Zend_Http_Response
object, and a reference URI, as either a string or a
Zend_Uri_Http object. This method will return a new
Zend_Http_CookieJar object, already containing the cookies set by
the passed HTTP response. The reference URI will
be used to set the cookie's domain and path, if they are not defined in the Set-Cookie
headers.
Adding Cookies to a Zend_Http_CookieJar object
Usually, the Zend_Http_Client object you attached your CookieJar
object to will automatically add cookies set by HTTP responses to
your jar. if you wish to manually add cookies to your jar, this can be done by using
two methods:
-
Zend_Http_CookieJar->addCookie($cookie[, $ref_uri]):
Add a single cookie to the jar. $cookie can be either a
Zend_Http_Cookie object or a string, which will be
converted automatically into a Cookie object. If a string is provided, you
should also provide $ref_uri - which is a reference URI
either as a string or Zend_Uri_Http object, to use as
the cookie's default domain and path.
-
Zend_Http_CookieJar->addCookiesFromResponse($response,
$ref_uri): Add all cookies set in a single
HTTP response to the jar. $response is expected to be a
Zend_Http_Response object with Set-Cookie headers.
$ref_uri is the request URI, either as a string or a
Zend_Uri_Http object, according to which the cookies'
default domain and path will be set.
Retrieving Cookies From a Zend_Http_CookieJar object
Just like with adding cookies, there is usually no need to manually
fetch cookies from a CookieJar object. Your Zend_Http_Client
object will automatically fetch the cookies required for an HTTP
request for you. However, you can still use 3 provided methods to fetch
cookies from the jar object: getCookie(),
getAllCookies(), and
getMatchingCookies(). Additionnaly, iterating over the
CookieJar will let you retrieve all the Zend_Http_Cookie objects
from it.
It is important to note that each one of these methods takes a
special parameter, which sets the return type of the method. This
parameter can have 3 values:
-
Zend_Http_CookieJar::COOKIE_OBJECT: Return
a Zend_Http_Cookie object. If the method returns more
than one cookie, an array of objects will be returned.
-
Zend_Http_CookieJar::COOKIE_STRING_ARRAY: Return
cookies as strings, in a "foo=bar" format, suitable for sending
in a HTTP request "Cookie" header. If more than one
cookie is returned, an array of strings is returned.
-
Zend_Http_CookieJar::COOKIE_STRING_CONCAT: Similar to
COOKIE_STRING_ARRAY, but if more than one cookie is returned, this
method will concatenate all cookies into a single, long string
separated by semicolons (;), and return it. This is especially useful
if you want to directly send all matching cookies in a single
HTTP request "Cookie" header.
-
Zend_Http_CookieJar::COOKIE_STRING_CONCAT_STRICT: Similar to
COOKIE_STRING_CONCAT, but follows a strict implementation of RFC6265. In this mode,
a single space character always follows the semicolon separator between cookies, and
the semicolon separator is stripped from the end of the cookie string.
The structure of the different cookie-fetching methods is described below:
-
Zend_Http_CookieJar->getCookie($uri, $cookie_name[,
$ret_as]): Get a single cookie from the jar, according to
its URI (domain and path) and name. $uri is either a
string or a Zend_Uri_Http object representing the
URI. $cookie_name is a string identifying the cookie
name. $ret_as specifies the return type as described above. $ret_type is
optional, and defaults to COOKIE_OBJECT.
-
Zend_Http_CookieJar->getAllCookies($ret_as): Get all
cookies from the jar. $ret_as specifies the return type as described
above. If not specified, $ret_type defaults to COOKIE_OBJECT.
-
Zend_Http_CookieJar->getMatchingCookies($uri[,
$matchSessionCookies[, $ret_as[, $now]]]): Get all cookies
from the jar that match a specified scenario, that is a
URI and expiration time.
-
$uri is either a
Zend_Uri_Http object or a string
specifying the connection type (secure or non-secure), domain
and path to match against.
-
$matchSessionCookies is a boolean telling
whether to match session cookies or not. Session cookies are
cookies that have no specified expiration time. Defaults to
TRUE.
-
$ret_as specifies the return type as
described above. If not specified, defaults to COOKIE_OBJECT.
-
$now is an integer representing the UNIX time
stamp to consider as "now" - that is any cookies who are set to
expire before this time will not be matched. If not specified,
defaults to the current time.
You can read more about cookie matching in
this section.
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