Store Session cookie for groups of subdomains in ASP.NET IIS7
I have an application running ASP.NET. I have different domains and different sub-domains. I want the domains to share session with their sub domains.
For Example, the following domains access this application:
www.example1.comprint.example1.comwww.example2.comprint.example2.comIf a user goes to www.example1.com and print.example1.com, I want it to use the same session. If the user were to go to www.example2.com and print.example2.com, I would want it to use a different session than the *.example1.com.
The way I used to handle it was a hack in page_load that works perfectly in IIS6:
Response.Cookies["ASP.NET_SessionId"].Value = Session.SessionID; Response.Cookies["ASP.NET_SessionId"].Domain = SiteUtility.GetCookieDomain(); (SiteUtility.GetCookieDomain would return .example1.com or .example2.com depending on the url of the request)Unfortunately, this no longer seems to work for iis7. Each subdomain/domain a user goes to, the user gets a new session cookie.
I then found the web.config entry:
'<httpCookies domain=".example1.com" />开发者_JS百科.This works great for sharing session cookie between example1.com subdomains. Unfortunately, this completely screws up session state for *.example2.com.
Any ideas on how I can solve this?
Have you tried creating a HttpModule
that intercepts the EndRequest
-event, iterates over the Response.Cookies
collection, finds the session-cooke and changes its Domain
property before actually sending it to the client.
Edit:
Kevin at the end determined that one of the subdomains was in a trusted state in ie8 while the other was not. When both are in a trusted state (and presumambly both in an untrusted state) it works. I did spent the most time on this, so Kevin want to give me the credit for the answer.
rather than using SiteUtility.GetCookieDomain(), try using:
var domainSansTLD = Request.Url.Host.Replace(".com", "");
var secondLevelDomain = domainSansTLD.Substring(domainSansTLD.LastIndexOf('.'));
var cookieDomain = secondLevelDomain + ".com";
First way,
Store session as file in a location that both servers can access (this is good for virtual servers or shared folders). This method is a bit unreliable and shared folders and lag thus causing problems.
Okay, I was going to write a couple of other methods but I'm sure they'll be posted as they have more knowledge with asp.net than I, however, I do have a personal preference that I think would be a good option.
This option would be a memcache server. Essentially it's a database that runs off RAM and you point all of your sessions to it (tcp://mem.domain.com:1234 ... sorry I can't remember the usual port off the top of my head).
I hope I was of some help,
Jon
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