Difference between revisions of "VbzCart/pieces/sessions"

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m (Woozle moved page VbzCart/session to VbzCart/pieces/sessions without leaving a redirect: reorg)
 
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[[Technology]]: [[VbzCart]]: [[VbzCart Sessions|Sessions]]
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==Note==
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This documentation was last edited in 2008, and should be checked for accuracy.
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==About==
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A '''session''' is when a particular user is connected to [[VbzCart]] using a particular browser on a particular computer.
  
==Identifying Sessions==
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Multiple carts may be created in a single session, as well as multiple orders. The same cart may not be accessed from different sessions; the user needs to save the cart to something which can be identified humanly, i.e. an order (or, in the future, perhaps a wish list).
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A session also helps keep track of user preferences, e.g. searching only certain item types or topics.
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==Identifying a Session==
 
I've been debating about the idea of allowing carts to work using IP address/domain plus browser ID (user_agent) because cookies don't always seem to work (and some people have them turned off), and I think I've come up with a reasonable compromise.
 
I've been debating about the idea of allowing carts to work using IP address/domain plus browser ID (user_agent) because cookies don't always seem to work (and some people have them turned off), and I think I've come up with a reasonable compromise.
  
The problem is that one user might connect through a dial-up (dynamic IP), place orders in a cart and disconnect, and then another user with the same browser and OS might happen to connect through the same dial-up -- which would cause that user to be assigned the previous user's shopping cart. This isn't a ''serious'' problem, because no personal information will be conveyed, but it can be off-putting to go to a store and find that your cart already has items in it. I would be inclined to immediately go somewhere else.
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The problem is that one user might connect through a dial-up (dynamic IP), place orders in a cart and disconnect, and then another user with the same browser and OS might happen to connect through the same dial-up -- which would cause that user to be assigned the previous user's shopping cart. This isn't a ''serious'' problem, because no personal information will be conveyed, but it can be off-putting to go to a store and find that your cart already has items in it. I would be inclined to immediately go somewhere else if I encountered this.
  
 
What I've come up with is the following:
 
What I've come up with is the following:
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==Sequence of Events==
 
==Sequence of Events==
 
*On receiving one or more items to add to the cart:
 
*On receiving one or more items to add to the cart:
**Try to match with existing session:
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*#Try to match with existing session:
***Check for session cookie; if found, use that
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*#*Check for session cookie; if found, use that
***If no session cookie, look for unexpired IP/browser match
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*#*If no session cookie, look for unexpired IP/browser match
**If no usable existing session found, create a new one (empty cart)
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*#If no usable existing session found, create a new one (empty cart)
**Add items to the session cart
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*#Add items to the session cart
**Display cart & session info
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*#Display cart & session info

Latest revision as of 16:08, 4 June 2016

Note

This documentation was last edited in 2008, and should be checked for accuracy.

About

A session is when a particular user is connected to VbzCart using a particular browser on a particular computer.

Multiple carts may be created in a single session, as well as multiple orders. The same cart may not be accessed from different sessions; the user needs to save the cart to something which can be identified humanly, i.e. an order (or, in the future, perhaps a wish list).

A session also helps keep track of user preferences, e.g. searching only certain item types or topics.

Identifying a Session

I've been debating about the idea of allowing carts to work using IP address/domain plus browser ID (user_agent) because cookies don't always seem to work (and some people have them turned off), and I think I've come up with a reasonable compromise.

The problem is that one user might connect through a dial-up (dynamic IP), place orders in a cart and disconnect, and then another user with the same browser and OS might happen to connect through the same dial-up -- which would cause that user to be assigned the previous user's shopping cart. This isn't a serious problem, because no personal information will be conveyed, but it can be off-putting to go to a store and find that your cart already has items in it. I would be inclined to immediately go somewhere else if I encountered this.

What I've come up with is the following:

  • sessions IDed via IP/browser have a much shorter expiration than cookie sessions
  • sessions IDed via IP/browser will show a warning to indicate the shorter expiration time (should show the time when the session will expire -- and the current time, to prevent timezone confusion)
  • cookies have never been used for checkout; we have always used POST data (?session=xxxxx), so that's not an issue

Sequence of Events

  • On receiving one or more items to add to the cart:
    1. Try to match with existing session:
      • Check for session cookie; if found, use that
      • If no session cookie, look for unexpired IP/browser match
    2. If no usable existing session found, create a new one (empty cart)
    3. Add items to the session cart
    4. Display cart & session info