Made some small improvements to docs/topics/http/sessions.txt

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@10839 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Adrian Holovaty 2009-05-26 05:29:28 +00:00
parent 5d9983d084
commit 9848f888ba
1 changed files with 7 additions and 7 deletions

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@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ It also has these methods:
.. versionadded:: 1.0
Delete the current session data from the database and regenerate the
Delete the current session data from the session and regenerate the
session key value that is sent back to the user in the cookie. This is
used if you want to ensure that the previous session data can't be
accessed again from the user's browser (for example, the
@ -383,9 +383,9 @@ by explicitly calling ``request.session.set_expiry()`` as described above in
Clearing the session table
==========================
Note that session data can accumulate in the ``django_session`` database table
and Django does *not* provide automatic purging. Therefore, it's your job to
purge expired sessions on a regular basis.
If you're using the database backend, note that session data can accumulate in
the ``django_session`` database table and Django does *not* provide automatic
purging. Therefore, it's your job to purge expired sessions on a regular basis.
To understand this problem, consider what happens when a user uses a session.
When a user logs in, Django adds a row to the ``django_session`` database
@ -393,7 +393,7 @@ table. Django updates this row each time the session data changes. If the user
logs out manually, Django deletes the row. But if the user does *not* log out,
the row never gets deleted.
Django provides a sample clean-up script in ``django-admin.py cleanup``.
Django provides a sample clean-up script: ``django-admin.py cleanup``.
That script deletes any session in the session table whose ``expire_date`` is
in the past -- but your application may have different requirements.
@ -440,8 +440,8 @@ SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN
Default: ``None``
The domain to use for session cookies. Set this to a string such as
``".lawrence.com"`` for cross-domain cookies, or use ``None`` for a standard
domain cookie.
``".lawrence.com"`` (note the leading dot!) for cross-domain cookies, or use
``None`` for a standard domain cookie.
SESSION_COOKIE_NAME
-------------------