Sindbad~EG File Manager
<?php
require 'SharedConfigurations.php';
// This example demonstrates how to leverage Predis to save PHP sessions on Redis.
//
// The value of `session.gc_maxlifetime` in `php.ini` will be used by default as the
// the TTL for keys holding session data on Redis, but this value can be overridden
// when creating the session handler instance with the `gc_maxlifetime` option.
//
// Note that this class needs PHP >= 5.4 but can be used on PHP 5.3 if a polyfill for
// SessionHandlerInterface (see http://www.php.net/class.sessionhandlerinterface.php)
// is provided either by you or an external package like `symfony/http-foundation`.
if (!interface_exists('SessionHandlerInterface')) {
die("ATTENTION: the session handler implemented by Predis needs PHP >= 5.4.0 or a polyfill ".
"for \SessionHandlerInterface either provided by you or an external package.\n");
}
// Instantiate a new client just like you would normally do. We'll prefix our session keys here.
$client = new Predis\Client($single_server, array('prefix' => 'sessions:'));
// Set `gc_maxlifetime` so that a session will be expired after 5 seconds since last access.
$handler = new Predis\Session\SessionHandler($client, array('gc_maxlifetime' => 5));
// Register our session handler (it uses `session_set_save_handler()` internally).
$handler->register();
// Set a fixed session ID just for the sake of our example.
session_id('example_session_id');
session_start();
if (isset($_SESSION['foo'])) {
echo "Session has `foo` set to {$_SESSION['foo']}\n";
} else {
$_SESSION['foo'] = $value = mt_rand();
echo "Empty session, `foo` has been set with $value\n";
}
Sindbad File Manager Version 1.0, Coded By Sindbad EG ~ The Terrorists