Session management settings


 

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To manage HTTP session support. This support includes...

To view this admin console page at the Web container level, click...

Servers | Server Types | WebSphere application servers | server_name | Session management

Note that the session management settings can be overridden at the application level.

Session tracking mechanism

Specifies a mechanism for HTTP session management.

Mechanism Function Default
Enable SSL ID Tracking

Deprecated feature: This feature is deprecated in WAS version 7.0. We can reconfigure session tracking to use cookies or modify the application to use URL rewriting.

Session tracking uses SSL information as a session ID. Enabling SSL tracking takes precedence over cookie-based session tracking and URL rewriting.

There are two parameters available if we enable SSL ID tracking:

SSLV3Timeout specifies the time interval after which SSL sessions are renegotiated. This is a high setting and modification does not provide any significant impact on performance. The SAS parameter establishes an SSL connection only if it goes out of the JVM to another JVM. If all the beans are co-located within the same JVM, the SSL used by SAS does not hinder performance.

These are set by editing the sas.server.properties and sas.client.props files located in...

product_installation_root\properties

...where product_installation_root is the directory where WAS is installed.

SAS is supported only between V6.0.x and previous version servers that have been federated in a V 6.1 cell.

9600 seconds
Enable cookies Session tracking uses cookies to carry session IDs.

If cookies are enabled, session tracking recognizes session IDs that arrive as cookies and tries to use cookies for sending session IDs. If cookies are not enabled, session tracking uses URL rewriting instead of cookies (if URL rewriting is enabled).

Enable cookies takes precedence over URL rewriting. Click Enable cookies to change these settings. Application level session management settings override the server level session management settings. Because session management is defined at the application level, enabling cookies for the administration console is handled in deployment.xml.

 
Enable URL rewriting The session management facility uses rewritten URLs to carry the session IDs. If URL rewriting is enabled, the session management facility recognizes session IDs that arrive in the URL if the encodeURL method is called in the servlet.  
Enable protocol switch rewriting This option is only available when Enable URL rewriting is selected. This option specifies that the session ID is added to a URL when the URL requires a switch from HTTP to HTTPS or from HTTPS to HTTP. If rewriting is enabled, the session ID is required to go between HTTP and HTTPS.  

Maximum in-memory session count

Maximum number of sessions to maintain in memory.

The meaning differs depending on whether we are using in-memory or distributed sessions. For in-memory sessions, this value specifies the number of sessions in the base session table. Use the Allow overflow property to specify whether to limit sessions to this number for the entire session management facility or to allow additional sessions to be stored in secondary tables. For distributed sessions, this value specifies the size of the memory cache for sessions.

When the session cache has reached its maximum size and a new session is requested, the session management facility removes the least recently used session from the cache to make room for the new one.

Do not set this value to a number less than the maximum thread pool size for the server.

Allow overflow

The number of sessions in memory can exceed the value specified by the Max in-memory session count property. This option is valid only in non-distributed sessions mode.

Session timeout

How long a session can go unused before it is no longer valid. Specify either Set timeout or No timeout. Specify the value in minutes greater than or equal to two.

The value specified in a Web module deployment descriptor file takes precedence over the admin console settings. However, the value of this setting is used as a default when the session timeout is not specified in a Web module deployment descriptor. Note that to preserve performance, the invalidation timer is not accurate to the second. When the write frequency is time based, ensure that this value is least twice as large as the write interval.

Security integration

When security integration is enabled, the session management facility associates the identity of users with their HTTP sessions

Serialize session access

Concurrent session access in a given server is not allowed.

Maximum wait time Maximum amount of time a servlet request waits on an HTTP session before continuing execution. This parameter is optional and expressed in seconds. The default is 5 seconds. Under normal conditions, a servlet request waiting for access to an HTTP session gets notified by the request that currently owns the given HTTP session when the request finishes.
Allow access on timeout Whether the servlet is started normally or aborted in the event of a timeout. If this box is checked, the servlet is started normally.

If this box is not checked, the servlet execution aborts and error logs are generated.





 

Related tasks

Set session tracking
Set session management by level