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cgi::session::serialize::default(3) [centos man page]

CGI::Session::Serialize::default(3)			User Contributed Perl Documentation		       CGI::Session::Serialize::default(3)

NAME
CGI::Session::Serialize::default - Default CGI::Session serializer DESCRIPTION
This library is used by CGI::Session driver to serialize session data before storing it in disk. All the methods are called as class methods. METHODS
freeze($class, \%hash) Receives two arguments. First is the class name, the second is the data to be serialized. Should return serialized string on success, undef on failure. Error message should be set using "set_error()|CGI::Session::ErrorHandler/"set_error()"" thaw($class, $string) Received two arguments. First is the class name, second is the frozen data string. Should return thawed data structure on success, undef on failure. Error message should be set using "set_error()|CGI::Session::ErrorHandler/"set_error()"" LICENSING
For support and licensing see CGI::Session perl v5.16.3 2008-07-16 CGI::Session::Serialize::default(3)

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CGI::Session::Driver::postgresql(3)			User Contributed Perl Documentation		       CGI::Session::Driver::postgresql(3)

NAME
CGI::Session::Driver::postgresql - PostgreSQL driver for CGI::Session SYNOPSIS
use CGI::Session; $session = new CGI::Session("driver:PostgreSQL", undef, {Handle=>$dbh}); DESCRIPTION
CGI::Session::PostgreSQL is a CGI::Session driver to store session data in a PostgreSQL table. STORAGE
Before you can use any DBI-based session drivers you need to make sure compatible database table is created for CGI::Session to work with. Following command will produce minimal requirements in most SQL databases: CREATE TABLE sessions ( id CHAR(32) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, a_session BYTEA NOT NULL ); and within your code use: use CGI::Session; $session = new CGI::Session("driver:PostgreSQL", undef, {Handle=>$dbh, ColumnType=>"binary"}); Please note the ColumnType argument. PostgreSQL's text type has problems when trying to hold a null character. (Known as "" in Perl, not to be confused with SQL NULL). If you know there is no chance of ever having a null character in the serialized data, you can leave off the ColumnType attribute. Using a BYTEA column type and "ColumnType => 'binary'" is recommended when using Storable as the serializer or if there's any possibility that a null value will appear in any of the serialized data. To use different column names, change the 'create table' statement, and then simply do this: $s = new CGI::Session('driver:pg', undef, { TableName=>'session', IdColName=>'my_id', DataColName=>'my_data', DataSource=>'dbi:pg:dbname=project', }); or $s = new CGI::Session('driver:pg', undef, { TableName=>'session', IdColName=>'my_id', DataColName=>'my_data', Handle=>$dbh, }); For more details see CGI::Session::Driver::DBI, parent class. Also see sqlite driver, which exercises different method for dealing with binary data. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2002 Cosimo Streppone. All rights reserved. This library is free software and can be modified and distributed under the same terms as Perl itself. AUTHORS
Cosimo Streppone <cosimo@cpan.org>, heavily based on the CGI::Session::MySQL driver by Sherzod Ruzmetov, original author of CGI::Session. Matt LeBlanc contributed significant updates for the 4.0 release. LICENSING
For additional support and licensing see CGI::Session perl v5.16.3 2008-07-16 CGI::Session::Driver::postgresql(3)
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