express-token-session v1.2.1
- exports.Store
- warning
- session()
- req.session
- Session#destroy()
- Session#reload()
- Session#save()
- Session#touch()
exports.Store
Expose constructors.
warning
Warning message for MemoryStore usage in production.
session()
Session:
Setup session store with the given `options`.Examples:
connect()
.use(connect.json())
.use(connect.session()Options:
- `store` session store instance - logger optional logger provided by log4js-node
req.session
To store or access session data, simply use the request property req.session,
which is (generally) serialized as JSON by the store, so nested objects
are typically fine. For example below is a user-specific view counter:
connect()
.use(connect.favicon())
.use(connect.json())
.use(connect.session()
.use(function(req, res, next){
var sess = req.session;
if (sess.views) {
res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/html');
res.write('<p>views: ' + sess.views + '</p>');
res.end();
sess.views++;
} else {
sess.views = 1;
res.end('welcome to the session demo. refresh!');
}
}
)).listen(3000);Session#destroy()
Destroys the session, removes req.session.
req.session.destroy(function(err){
// cannot access session here
});Session#reload()
Reloads the session data.
req.session.reload(function(err){
// session updated
});Session#save()
Save the session.
req.session.save(function(err){
// session saved
});Session#touch()
Updates the .maxAge property. Typically this is
not necessary to call, as the session middleware does this for you.
Session Store Implementation:
Every session store must implement the following methods
.get(sid, callback).set(sid, session, callback).destroy(sid, callback)Recommended methods include, but are not limited to:
.length(callback).clear(callback)For an example implementation view the token-session-redis repo.