For three days I had nearly despaired when I tried to extend a WordPress site with a self-written login script. Everything worked properly on my local server, but as soon as I had uploaded it, the session variables didn’t seem to be passed any more: after the login, I stayed logged in for only one more click and then got logged out again.
After several unsuccessful Google searches (with the wisdom of hindsight it’s quite easy to google, but try and find something about this issue without reading any further than this) I found the reason at last, namely the function wp_unregister_GLOBALS()
inside the file wp-settings.php
. Here it is:
function wp_unregister_GLOBALS() {
if ( !ini_get('register_globals') )
return;
if ( isset($_REQUEST['GLOBALS']) )
die('GLOBALS overwrite attempt detected');
// Variables that shouldn't be unset
$noUnset = array('GLOBALS', '_GET', '_POST', '_COOKIE', '_REQUEST', '_SERVER', '_ENV', '_FILES', 'table_prefix');
$input = array_merge($_GET, $_POST, $_COOKIE, $_SERVER, $_ENV, $_FILES, isset($_SESSION) && is_array($_SESSION) ? $_SESSION : array());
foreach ( $input as $k => $v )
if ( !in_array($k, $noUnset) && isset($GLOBALS[$k]) ) {
$GLOBALS[$k] = NULL;
unset($GLOBALS[$k]);
}
}
What does this function do?
- Line 27/28:
Ifregister_globals
is not activated in the PHP settings of the web server, it won’t do anything at all (which explains the different behaviours of my script on my local and the live server). If, however,register_globals
is active, it proceeds as follows:- Line 34:
As the comment already says, all global variables listed here will not be reset. As you can see,$_SESSION
is not being mentioned! - Line 36-41:
Now, all global variables are being shifted and deleted one by one.
- Line 34:
In short: If register_globals
is activated, $_SESSION
will be deleted on every single page view. No surprise that we can’t get at our session variables any more!
What’s it all about?
Well, for one thing, WordPress assumes that it’s meant to take care of the complete site – after all it is some kind of content management system. And that includes the administration of all variables as well.
What’s much more important though, is the fact, that the use of register_globals
has been deprecated for a long time and the feature will even be completely removed in PHP 6. Today, it is strongly recommended not to use these kind of variables, because they involve safety hazards. So, WordPress is obviously trying to imitate the behaviour of a deactivated register_globals
in order to ensure safety and avoid potential variable conflicts.
Remedy
After having solved this riddle, the solution was perfectly obvious: I have to deactivate register_globals
on the web server, so WordPress wouldn’t even need to execute that stupid function. For this purpose, simply place a text file called php.ini
inside your WordPress directory, containing the following line:
register_globals Off
Further information on the subject can be found on php.net:
73 responses to “Session variables in WordPress”
Thanks very much for the info!
Nice site by the way.
I am here for the first time but have bookmarked it.
I love you, I have been working on this problem the entire day before I came across your site. You are a life saver!
I tried all this solutions, but still not working for me.
Please anybody help me, its really urgent.
I am using session for HotelID, based on which I am getting all the information in the pages from mssql database which I have connected with this wordpress site.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Arpita
Did you put
session_start()
in yourwp-config.php
?Great job, thank you very much!!! I was becoming crazy with vars SESSION legacy, from the web pages to the intern web blog. Luckily, I find this post before spend all the day ;DDD
Great post! I feel obligated to write something to thank you for sharing this information.
:D
No problem, man! ;)
I’m experiencing a similar problem with WordPress and was hoping that you may be able to offer some insight.
In my header.php
—
session_start();
print_r($_SESSION);
global $myVar;
$myVar = time();
—
In my footer.php
—
global $myVar;
$_SESSION[‘key’] = $myVar;
print_r($_SESSION);
—
When I do this, the output in the footer shows me that the the session variable ‘key’ was correctly set to my new time value (myVar). However, when I reload the page, the header output will show that the same session variable ‘key’ is now 2-5 seconds faster than it should be. It is like the header is being called again after the page has loaded.
It’s Crazy!
Try out:
if ( !session_id() )
add_action( ‘init’, ‘session_start’ );
As already mentioned before, I was assuming in my post that everybody has naturally added “session_start()” to his code somewhere. But your version is very nice and clean, I will keep it in mind for the future! :)