from django.contrib.sessions.base_session import (
AbstractBaseSession, BaseSessionManager,
)
class SessionManager(BaseSessionManager):
use_in_migrations = True
class Session(AbstractBaseSession):
"""
Django provides full support for anonymous sessions. The session
framework lets you store and retrieve arbitrary data on a
per-site-visitor basis. It stores data on the server side and
abstracts the sending and receiving of cookies. Cookies contain a
session ID -- not the data itself.
The Django sessions framework is entirely cookie-based. It does
not fall back to putting session IDs in URLs. This is an intentional
design decision. Not only does that behavior make URLs ugly, it makes
your site vulnerable to session-ID theft via the "Referer" header.
For complete documentation on using Sessions in your code, consult
the sessions documentation that is shipped with Django (also available
on the Django Web site).
"""
objects = SessionManager()
@classmethod
def get_session_store_class(cls):
from django.contrib.sessions.backends.db import SessionStore
return SessionStore
class Meta(AbstractBaseSession.Meta):
db_table = 'django_session'