On Tue, 2 Sep 2003 20:21:45 +0200
Xavier Noria [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tuesday 02 September 2003 07:28, Perrin Harkins wrote:
Sorry, I don't understand what you're saying here. What you should
be doing is fetching the session once, putting it in pnotes, and
getting it from pnotes
Sorry, I missed this message until now...
On Tue, 2003-09-02 at 14:21, Xavier Noria wrote:
Let's assume a new user comes to the website. We set up a session for
him and put the session id in a cookie to be sent in the response. As
you know, somewhere in the request cycle of that particular
Xavier Noria wrote:
It seems, however, that Apache::Session objects stop being stored when I
put the session in pnotes() with a code analogous to this:
Can you tell us more about the problem is? What do you see when you
take the session hash back out of pnotes?
my $r =
On Tuesday 02 September 2003 07:46, you wrote:
(I am sorry I am not replying to the actual email, but to a forwarded
copy from my desktop at home.)
It seems, however, that Apache::Session objects stop being stored
when I put the session in pnotes() with a code analogous to this:
Can you
On Tue, 2003-09-02 at 05:02, Xavier Noria wrote:
Can you tell us more about the problem is? What do you see when you
take the session hash back out of pnotes?
I have dumped the hash in a content handler and it seems to be OK.
Okay, then what is the problem that you're asking for help with
On Tuesday 02 September 2003 07:28, Perrin Harkins wrote:
Sorry, I don't understand what you're saying here. What you should
be doing is fetching the session once, putting it in pnotes, and
getting it from pnotes for the rest of the request.
I am sorry, I'll try to reword it.
Let's assume a