How to solve "CSRF Token Mismatch" in Laravel - php

I am working on a laravel application. Upon hosting it on my domain, I am running into a "CSRF token mismatch" error. Locally, the application is working fine because I have included the csrf token in the header as shown in the documentation. Therefore, the csrf token is being generated successfully and being included in the header of requests. On doing some debugging, I changed the SESSION_DRIVER in env file to file so that I can see the sessions. I realized that multiple sessions are being generated for one user. The SESSION_LIFETIME is set to 120, which I believe is okay. In looking at the tokens in the sessions stored in storage/framework/sessions, none contains the token that is generated by the browser. What could be the issue? Remember that it is working fine locally. What configurations on the host domain could be affecting the sessions of the application.

I once ran into the same error while hosting in the cPanel and took me almost 3days to figure out the solution for my case.
I do not know if this works for you but give it a try.
Inside your main index.php file inside the public folder, edit it and at the very top after starting PHP tags, write
ob_start()
This function will take the contents of the output buffer and returns a string that is to be sent to the browser for rendering and removes the spaces or line breaks you put before starting PHP.
Also, try clearing the cache as suggested in the comments.
Let me know if this helps you as well.

I had this very same problem, receiving the "CSRF Token Mismatch" exception in Laravel 7, having fixed everything else, like setting the csrf token on page header, in ajax requests, clearing the cache, anything you can think of and usually find in solution proposals.
So, if anyone ever runs into this, I haven't found this solution anywhere else, and it really cost me hours.
I had called the application on the wrong URL!
I used my local IP literally, instead of using the word "localhost".
So, if you're developing locally, calling you app with your IP, try calling it on http://localhost!

Add the following line to the head tag.
<meta name="csrf-token" content="{{ csrf_token() }}"> // Add in <head></head>
Then get you can get this content attribute in Laravel. Also, in your script tag, add the following code (this is to make sure when you submit the form, you get the correct csrf_token).
$.ajaxSetup({
headers: {
'X-CSRF-TOKEN': $('meta[name="csrf-token"]').attr('content')
}
});

Unlike #cslotty, in my case I actually had to change my URL from 'localhost' to '127.0.0.1' for it to work. My frontend is in React and the backend in Laravel 8.

I faced this issue. I found the solution in Laravel document itself.
We can add $csrf after the form element
<form method="POST" action="/profile">
#csrf
//input fields here
</form>

Related

PHP session variables lost after header() redirect [duplicate]

How do I resolve the problem of losing a session after a redirect in PHP?
Recently, I encountered a very common problem of losing session after redirect. And after searching through this website I can still find no solution (although this came the closest).
Update
I have found the answer and I thought I'd post it here to help anyone experiencing the same problem.
First, carry out these usual checks:
Make sure session_start(); is called before any sessions are being called. So a safe bet would be to put it at the beginning of your page, immediately after the opening <?php declaration before anything else. Also ensure there are no whitespaces/tabs before the opening <?php declaration.
After the header redirect, end the current script using exit(); (Others have also suggested session_write_close(); and session_regenerate_id(true), you can try those as well, but I'd use exit();)
Make sure cookies are enabled in the browser you are using to test it on.
Ensure register_globals is off, you can check this on the php.ini file and also using phpinfo(). Refer to this as to how to turn it off.
Make sure you didn't delete or empty the session
Make sure the key in your $_SESSION superglobal array is not overwritten anywhere
Make sure you redirect to the same domain. So redirecting from a www.yourdomain.com to yourdomain.com doesn't carry the session forward.
Make sure your file extension is .php (it happens!)
Now, these are the most common mistakes, but if they didn't do the trick, the problem is most likely to do with your hosting company. If everything works on localhost but not on your remote/testing server, then this is most likely the culprit. So check the knowledge base of your hosting provider (also try their forums etc). For companies like FatCow and iPage, they require you to specify session_save_path. So like this:
session_save_path('"your home directory path"/cgi-bin/tmp');
session_start();
(replace "your home directory path" with your actual home directory path. This is usually within your control panel (or equivalent), but you can also create a test.php file on your root directory and type:
<?php echo $_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']; ?>
The bit before 'test.php' is your home directory path. And of course, make sure that the folder actually exists within your root directory. (Some programs do not upload empty folders when synchronizing)
you should use "exit" after header-call
header('Location: http://www.example.com/?blabla=blubb');
exit;
I tried all possible solutions, but none worked for me! Of course, I am using a shared hosting service.
In the end, I got around the problem by using 'relative url' inside the redirecting header !
header("location: http://example.com/index.php")
nullified the session cookies
header("location: index.php")
worked like a charm !
I had the same problem. I worked on it for several hours and it drove me crazy.
In my case the problem was a 404 called due to a missing favicon.ico in Chrome and Firefox only. The other navigators worked fine.
I was having the same problem. All of a sudden SOME of my session variables would not persist to the next page. Problem turned out to be ( in php7.1) you header location must not have WWW in it, ex https://mysite. is ok, https://www.mysite. will lose that pages session variables. Not all, just that page.
When i use relative path "dir/file.php" with in the header() function in works for me.
I think that the session is not saved for some reason when you redirect using the full url...
//Does retain the session info for some reason
header("Location: dir");
//Does not retain the session for some reason
header("Location: https://mywebz.com/dir")
I had a similar problem, although my context was slightly different.
I had a local development setup on a machine whose hostname was windows and IP address was 192.168.56.2.
I could access the system using either of:
http://localhost/
http://127.0.0.1/
http://windows/
http://192.168.56.2/
After logging in, my PHP code would redirect using:
header('http://windows/');
If the previous domain name used to access the system was not windows, the session data would be lost. I solved this by changing the code to:
header('http://'.$_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'].'/');
It now works regardless of what local domain name or IP address the user puts in.
I hope this may be useful to someone.
I ran into this issue on one particular page. I was setting $_SESSION values in other pages right before redirecting and everything was working fine. But this particular page was not working.
Finally I realized that in this particular page, I was destroying the session at the beginning of the page but never starting it again. So my destroy function changed from:
function sessionKill(){
session_destroy();
}
to:
function sessionKill(){
session_destroy();
session_start();
}
And everything worked!
This stumped me for a long time (and this post was great to find!) but for anyone else who still can't get sessions between page redirects to work...I had to go into the php.ini file and turn cookies on:
session.use_cookies = 1
I thought sessions worked without cookies...in fact I know they SHOULD...but this fixed my problem at least until I can understand what may be going on in the bigger picture.
I've been struggling with this for days, checking/trying all the solutions, but my problem was I didn't call session_start(); again after the redirect. I just assumed the session was 'still alive'.
So don't forget that!
Nothing worked for me but I found what caused the problem (and solved it):
Check your browser cookies and make sure that there are no php session cookies on different subdomains (like one for "www.website.com" and one for "website.com").
This was caused by a javascript that incorrectly used the subdomain to set cookies and to open pages in iframes.
KEY POINT'S
Do not start a session on the return page.
Don't use session variable and not include header.php which user session variable
Just make a link go to home page or profile page after insert payment info and status
I had the same problem and found the easiest way.
I simply redirected to a redirect .html with 1 line of JS
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<script type="text/javascript">
<!--
window.location = "admin_index.php";
//–>
</script>
</html>
instead of PHP
header_remove();
header('Location: admin_login.php');
die;
I hope this helps.
Love
Gram
If you are using session_set_cookie_params() you might want to check if you are passing the fourth param $secure as true. If you are, then you need to access the url using https.
The $secure param being true means the Session is only available within a secure request. This might affect you locally more than in stage or production environments.
Mentioning it because I just spent most of today trying to find this issue, and this is what solved it for me. I was just added to this project and no one mentioned that it required https.
So you can either use https locally, or you can set the $secure param to FALSE and then use http locally. Just be sure to set it back to true when you push your changes up.
Depending on your local server, you might have to edit DocumentRoot in the httpd-ssl.conf of the server so that your local url is served https.
Another possible reason:
That is my server storage space. My server disk space become full. So, I have removed few files and folders in my server and tried.
It was worked!!!
I am saving my session in AWS Dynamo DB, but it still expects some space in my server to process the session. Not sure why!!!
ini_set('session.save_path',realpath(dirname($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']) . '/../session'));
session_start();
Too late to reply but this worked for me
To me this was permission error and this resolved it:
chown -R nginx:nginx /var/opt/remi/php73/lib/php/session
I have tested a few hours on PHP and the last test I did was that I created two files session1.php and session2.php.
session1.php:
session_start();
$_SESSION["user"] = 123;
header("Location: session2.php");
session2.php:
session_start();
print_r($_SESSION);
and it was printing an empty array.
At this point, I thought it could be a server issue and in fact, it was.
Hope this helps someone.
Verify that your session is not Strict. If it is, when you come back, like coming back from Stripe, it regenerate the session.
Use This:
ini_set('session.cookie_samesite', 'Lax');
I also had the same issue with the redirect not working and tried all the solutions I could find, my header redirect was being used in a form.
I solved it by putting the header redirect in a different php page 'signin_action.php' and passing the variables parameters through I wanted in url parameters and then reassigning them in the 'signin_action.php' form.
signin.php
if($stmt->num_rows>0) {
$_SESSION['username'] = $_POST['username'];
echo '<script>window.location.href = "http://'.$root.'/includes/functions/signin_action.php?username='.$_SESSION['username'].'";</script>';
error_reporting(E_ALL);
signin_action.php
<?php
require('../../config/init.php');
$_SESSION['username'] = $_GET['username'];
if ($_SESSION['username']) {
echo '<script>window.location.href = "http://'.$root.'/user/index.php";</script>';
exit();
} else {
echo 'Session not set';
}
?>
It is not a beautiful work-around but it worked.
For me the error was that I tried to save an unserialisable object in the session so that an exception was thrown while trying to write the session. But since all my error handling code had already ceased any operation I never saw the error.
I could find it in the Apache error logs, though.
Just for the record... I had this problem and after a few hours of trying everything the problem was that the disk was full, and php sessions could not be written into the tmp directory... so if you have this problem check that too...
For me, Firefox has stored session id (PHPSESSID) in a cookie, but Google Chrome has used GET or POST parameter.
So you only have to ensure that the returning script (for me: paypal checkout) commit PHPSESSID in url or POST parameter.
After trying many solutions here on SO and other blogs... what worked for me was adding .htaccess to my website root.
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^yoursitename.com$
RewriteRule ^.*$ "http\:\/\/www\.yoursitename\.com" [R=301,L]
If you're using Wordpress, I had to add this hook and start the session on init:
function register_my_session() {
if (!session_id()) {
session_start();
}
}
add_action('init', 'register_my_session');
First of all, make sure you are calling session_start() before using $_SESSION variable.
If you have disabled error reporting, try to turn in on and see the result.
ini_set('display_errors', 1);
ini_set('display_startup_errors', 1);
error_reporting(E_ALL);
The most common reasons that aren't mentioned in #dayuloli's answer:
Disk space problem. Make sure your disk space is not full, you need some space to store session files.
Session directory may not be writable. You can check it with is_writable(session_save_path())
I was having the same problem and I went nuts searching in my code for the answer. Finally I found my hosting recently updated the PHP version on my server and didn't correctly set up the session_save_path parameter on the php.ini file.
So, if someone reads this, please check php.ini config before anything else.
Make sure session_write_close is not called between session_start() and when you set your session.
session_start();
[...]
session_write_close();
[...]
$_SESSION['name']='Bob'; //<-- won't save
If you are using Laravel and you experience this issue, what you need is to save your session data before redirecting.
session()->save();
// Redirect the user to the authorization URL.
header('Location: ' . $authorizationUrl);
exit;
Now that GDPR is a thing, people visiting this question probably use a cookie script. Well, that script caused the problem for me. Apparently, PHP uses a cookie called PHPSESSID to track the session. If that script deletes it, you lose your data.
I used this cookie script. It has an option to enable "essential" cookies. I added PHPSESSID to the list, the script stopped deleting the cookie, and everything started to work again.
You could probably enable some PHP setting to avoid using PHPSESSID, but if your cookie script is the cause of the problem, why not fix that.
I fixed this problem after many days of debugging and it was all because my return URL coming from PayPal Express Checkout didn't have a 'www'. Chrome recognized that the domains should be treated the same but other browsers sometimes didn't. When using sessions/cookies and absolute paths, don't forget the 'www'!

Redirect 302 on Laravel POST request

I'm developing a Laravel Web Service.
When I try my POST routes with web forms, everything works fine, but when I try the same with a REST Client like Postman it doesn't get me the response that should.
It gives me status code 302, and redirects to "/". What's the problem?
This might be useful for other users that having the same problem cannot solve it with the accepted solution.
Make sure that the form fields names for instance <input type="text" name="document_name"> (document_name), match the names of the rules fields declared in the model.
public static $rules = ['document_name' => 'required|string'];
It doesn't throw any errors, nothing in the logs, it just redirects to the form, therefore the difficulty to find the problem.
When you try to POST request by Postman,you need to add _token field and it's value which is used to be protect XSS attack.See https://laravel.com/docs/5.2/routing#csrf-protection
When visiting the endpoint using Postman, set the Header
Accept: application/json
or Laravel would never know it's an API client and thus redirect with 302 message.
It's the mechanism for latest Laravel version since they provide api.php router beside web.php router.
Http status code 302 is used for redirection. It can be due to server side problem, Please check your laravel project's error log file or apache's error log file.
it looks like in postman you should point that the data you send is 'x-www-url-formurlencoded'

Why won't my $_SESSION variable change for each field [duplicate]

How do I resolve the problem of losing a session after a redirect in PHP?
Recently, I encountered a very common problem of losing session after redirect. And after searching through this website I can still find no solution (although this came the closest).
Update
I have found the answer and I thought I'd post it here to help anyone experiencing the same problem.
First, carry out these usual checks:
Make sure session_start(); is called before any sessions are being called. So a safe bet would be to put it at the beginning of your page, immediately after the opening <?php declaration before anything else. Also ensure there are no whitespaces/tabs before the opening <?php declaration.
After the header redirect, end the current script using exit(); (Others have also suggested session_write_close(); and session_regenerate_id(true), you can try those as well, but I'd use exit();)
Make sure cookies are enabled in the browser you are using to test it on.
Ensure register_globals is off, you can check this on the php.ini file and also using phpinfo(). Refer to this as to how to turn it off.
Make sure you didn't delete or empty the session
Make sure the key in your $_SESSION superglobal array is not overwritten anywhere
Make sure you redirect to the same domain. So redirecting from a www.yourdomain.com to yourdomain.com doesn't carry the session forward.
Make sure your file extension is .php (it happens!)
Now, these are the most common mistakes, but if they didn't do the trick, the problem is most likely to do with your hosting company. If everything works on localhost but not on your remote/testing server, then this is most likely the culprit. So check the knowledge base of your hosting provider (also try their forums etc). For companies like FatCow and iPage, they require you to specify session_save_path. So like this:
session_save_path('"your home directory path"/cgi-bin/tmp');
session_start();
(replace "your home directory path" with your actual home directory path. This is usually within your control panel (or equivalent), but you can also create a test.php file on your root directory and type:
<?php echo $_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']; ?>
The bit before 'test.php' is your home directory path. And of course, make sure that the folder actually exists within your root directory. (Some programs do not upload empty folders when synchronizing)
you should use "exit" after header-call
header('Location: http://www.example.com/?blabla=blubb');
exit;
I tried all possible solutions, but none worked for me! Of course, I am using a shared hosting service.
In the end, I got around the problem by using 'relative url' inside the redirecting header !
header("location: http://example.com/index.php")
nullified the session cookies
header("location: index.php")
worked like a charm !
I had the same problem. I worked on it for several hours and it drove me crazy.
In my case the problem was a 404 called due to a missing favicon.ico in Chrome and Firefox only. The other navigators worked fine.
I was having the same problem. All of a sudden SOME of my session variables would not persist to the next page. Problem turned out to be ( in php7.1) you header location must not have WWW in it, ex https://mysite. is ok, https://www.mysite. will lose that pages session variables. Not all, just that page.
When i use relative path "dir/file.php" with in the header() function in works for me.
I think that the session is not saved for some reason when you redirect using the full url...
//Does retain the session info for some reason
header("Location: dir");
//Does not retain the session for some reason
header("Location: https://mywebz.com/dir")
I had a similar problem, although my context was slightly different.
I had a local development setup on a machine whose hostname was windows and IP address was 192.168.56.2.
I could access the system using either of:
http://localhost/
http://127.0.0.1/
http://windows/
http://192.168.56.2/
After logging in, my PHP code would redirect using:
header('http://windows/');
If the previous domain name used to access the system was not windows, the session data would be lost. I solved this by changing the code to:
header('http://'.$_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'].'/');
It now works regardless of what local domain name or IP address the user puts in.
I hope this may be useful to someone.
I ran into this issue on one particular page. I was setting $_SESSION values in other pages right before redirecting and everything was working fine. But this particular page was not working.
Finally I realized that in this particular page, I was destroying the session at the beginning of the page but never starting it again. So my destroy function changed from:
function sessionKill(){
session_destroy();
}
to:
function sessionKill(){
session_destroy();
session_start();
}
And everything worked!
This stumped me for a long time (and this post was great to find!) but for anyone else who still can't get sessions between page redirects to work...I had to go into the php.ini file and turn cookies on:
session.use_cookies = 1
I thought sessions worked without cookies...in fact I know they SHOULD...but this fixed my problem at least until I can understand what may be going on in the bigger picture.
I've been struggling with this for days, checking/trying all the solutions, but my problem was I didn't call session_start(); again after the redirect. I just assumed the session was 'still alive'.
So don't forget that!
Nothing worked for me but I found what caused the problem (and solved it):
Check your browser cookies and make sure that there are no php session cookies on different subdomains (like one for "www.website.com" and one for "website.com").
This was caused by a javascript that incorrectly used the subdomain to set cookies and to open pages in iframes.
KEY POINT'S
Do not start a session on the return page.
Don't use session variable and not include header.php which user session variable
Just make a link go to home page or profile page after insert payment info and status
I had the same problem and found the easiest way.
I simply redirected to a redirect .html with 1 line of JS
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<script type="text/javascript">
<!--
window.location = "admin_index.php";
//–>
</script>
</html>
instead of PHP
header_remove();
header('Location: admin_login.php');
die;
I hope this helps.
Love
Gram
If you are using session_set_cookie_params() you might want to check if you are passing the fourth param $secure as true. If you are, then you need to access the url using https.
The $secure param being true means the Session is only available within a secure request. This might affect you locally more than in stage or production environments.
Mentioning it because I just spent most of today trying to find this issue, and this is what solved it for me. I was just added to this project and no one mentioned that it required https.
So you can either use https locally, or you can set the $secure param to FALSE and then use http locally. Just be sure to set it back to true when you push your changes up.
Depending on your local server, you might have to edit DocumentRoot in the httpd-ssl.conf of the server so that your local url is served https.
Another possible reason:
That is my server storage space. My server disk space become full. So, I have removed few files and folders in my server and tried.
It was worked!!!
I am saving my session in AWS Dynamo DB, but it still expects some space in my server to process the session. Not sure why!!!
ini_set('session.save_path',realpath(dirname($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']) . '/../session'));
session_start();
Too late to reply but this worked for me
To me this was permission error and this resolved it:
chown -R nginx:nginx /var/opt/remi/php73/lib/php/session
I have tested a few hours on PHP and the last test I did was that I created two files session1.php and session2.php.
session1.php:
session_start();
$_SESSION["user"] = 123;
header("Location: session2.php");
session2.php:
session_start();
print_r($_SESSION);
and it was printing an empty array.
At this point, I thought it could be a server issue and in fact, it was.
Hope this helps someone.
Verify that your session is not Strict. If it is, when you come back, like coming back from Stripe, it regenerate the session.
Use This:
ini_set('session.cookie_samesite', 'Lax');
I also had the same issue with the redirect not working and tried all the solutions I could find, my header redirect was being used in a form.
I solved it by putting the header redirect in a different php page 'signin_action.php' and passing the variables parameters through I wanted in url parameters and then reassigning them in the 'signin_action.php' form.
signin.php
if($stmt->num_rows>0) {
$_SESSION['username'] = $_POST['username'];
echo '<script>window.location.href = "http://'.$root.'/includes/functions/signin_action.php?username='.$_SESSION['username'].'";</script>';
error_reporting(E_ALL);
signin_action.php
<?php
require('../../config/init.php');
$_SESSION['username'] = $_GET['username'];
if ($_SESSION['username']) {
echo '<script>window.location.href = "http://'.$root.'/user/index.php";</script>';
exit();
} else {
echo 'Session not set';
}
?>
It is not a beautiful work-around but it worked.
For me the error was that I tried to save an unserialisable object in the session so that an exception was thrown while trying to write the session. But since all my error handling code had already ceased any operation I never saw the error.
I could find it in the Apache error logs, though.
Just for the record... I had this problem and after a few hours of trying everything the problem was that the disk was full, and php sessions could not be written into the tmp directory... so if you have this problem check that too...
For me, Firefox has stored session id (PHPSESSID) in a cookie, but Google Chrome has used GET or POST parameter.
So you only have to ensure that the returning script (for me: paypal checkout) commit PHPSESSID in url or POST parameter.
After trying many solutions here on SO and other blogs... what worked for me was adding .htaccess to my website root.
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^yoursitename.com$
RewriteRule ^.*$ "http\:\/\/www\.yoursitename\.com" [R=301,L]
If you're using Wordpress, I had to add this hook and start the session on init:
function register_my_session() {
if (!session_id()) {
session_start();
}
}
add_action('init', 'register_my_session');
First of all, make sure you are calling session_start() before using $_SESSION variable.
If you have disabled error reporting, try to turn in on and see the result.
ini_set('display_errors', 1);
ini_set('display_startup_errors', 1);
error_reporting(E_ALL);
The most common reasons that aren't mentioned in #dayuloli's answer:
Disk space problem. Make sure your disk space is not full, you need some space to store session files.
Session directory may not be writable. You can check it with is_writable(session_save_path())
I was having the same problem and I went nuts searching in my code for the answer. Finally I found my hosting recently updated the PHP version on my server and didn't correctly set up the session_save_path parameter on the php.ini file.
So, if someone reads this, please check php.ini config before anything else.
Make sure session_write_close is not called between session_start() and when you set your session.
session_start();
[...]
session_write_close();
[...]
$_SESSION['name']='Bob'; //<-- won't save
If you are using Laravel and you experience this issue, what you need is to save your session data before redirecting.
session()->save();
// Redirect the user to the authorization URL.
header('Location: ' . $authorizationUrl);
exit;
Now that GDPR is a thing, people visiting this question probably use a cookie script. Well, that script caused the problem for me. Apparently, PHP uses a cookie called PHPSESSID to track the session. If that script deletes it, you lose your data.
I used this cookie script. It has an option to enable "essential" cookies. I added PHPSESSID to the list, the script stopped deleting the cookie, and everything started to work again.
You could probably enable some PHP setting to avoid using PHPSESSID, but if your cookie script is the cause of the problem, why not fix that.
I fixed this problem after many days of debugging and it was all because my return URL coming from PayPal Express Checkout didn't have a 'www'. Chrome recognized that the domains should be treated the same but other browsers sometimes didn't. When using sessions/cookies and absolute paths, don't forget the 'www'!

PHP session lost after redirect

How do I resolve the problem of losing a session after a redirect in PHP?
Recently, I encountered a very common problem of losing session after redirect. And after searching through this website I can still find no solution (although this came the closest).
Update
I have found the answer and I thought I'd post it here to help anyone experiencing the same problem.
First, carry out these usual checks:
Make sure session_start(); is called before any sessions are being called. So a safe bet would be to put it at the beginning of your page, immediately after the opening <?php declaration before anything else. Also ensure there are no whitespaces/tabs before the opening <?php declaration.
After the header redirect, end the current script using exit(); (Others have also suggested session_write_close(); and session_regenerate_id(true), you can try those as well, but I'd use exit();)
Make sure cookies are enabled in the browser you are using to test it on.
Ensure register_globals is off, you can check this on the php.ini file and also using phpinfo(). Refer to this as to how to turn it off.
Make sure you didn't delete or empty the session
Make sure the key in your $_SESSION superglobal array is not overwritten anywhere
Make sure you redirect to the same domain. So redirecting from a www.yourdomain.com to yourdomain.com doesn't carry the session forward.
Make sure your file extension is .php (it happens!)
Now, these are the most common mistakes, but if they didn't do the trick, the problem is most likely to do with your hosting company. If everything works on localhost but not on your remote/testing server, then this is most likely the culprit. So check the knowledge base of your hosting provider (also try their forums etc). For companies like FatCow and iPage, they require you to specify session_save_path. So like this:
session_save_path('"your home directory path"/cgi-bin/tmp');
session_start();
(replace "your home directory path" with your actual home directory path. This is usually within your control panel (or equivalent), but you can also create a test.php file on your root directory and type:
<?php echo $_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']; ?>
The bit before 'test.php' is your home directory path. And of course, make sure that the folder actually exists within your root directory. (Some programs do not upload empty folders when synchronizing)
you should use "exit" after header-call
header('Location: http://www.example.com/?blabla=blubb');
exit;
I tried all possible solutions, but none worked for me! Of course, I am using a shared hosting service.
In the end, I got around the problem by using 'relative url' inside the redirecting header !
header("location: http://example.com/index.php")
nullified the session cookies
header("location: index.php")
worked like a charm !
I had the same problem. I worked on it for several hours and it drove me crazy.
In my case the problem was a 404 called due to a missing favicon.ico in Chrome and Firefox only. The other navigators worked fine.
I was having the same problem. All of a sudden SOME of my session variables would not persist to the next page. Problem turned out to be ( in php7.1) you header location must not have WWW in it, ex https://mysite. is ok, https://www.mysite. will lose that pages session variables. Not all, just that page.
When i use relative path "dir/file.php" with in the header() function in works for me.
I think that the session is not saved for some reason when you redirect using the full url...
//Does retain the session info for some reason
header("Location: dir");
//Does not retain the session for some reason
header("Location: https://mywebz.com/dir")
I had a similar problem, although my context was slightly different.
I had a local development setup on a machine whose hostname was windows and IP address was 192.168.56.2.
I could access the system using either of:
http://localhost/
http://127.0.0.1/
http://windows/
http://192.168.56.2/
After logging in, my PHP code would redirect using:
header('http://windows/');
If the previous domain name used to access the system was not windows, the session data would be lost. I solved this by changing the code to:
header('http://'.$_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'].'/');
It now works regardless of what local domain name or IP address the user puts in.
I hope this may be useful to someone.
I ran into this issue on one particular page. I was setting $_SESSION values in other pages right before redirecting and everything was working fine. But this particular page was not working.
Finally I realized that in this particular page, I was destroying the session at the beginning of the page but never starting it again. So my destroy function changed from:
function sessionKill(){
session_destroy();
}
to:
function sessionKill(){
session_destroy();
session_start();
}
And everything worked!
This stumped me for a long time (and this post was great to find!) but for anyone else who still can't get sessions between page redirects to work...I had to go into the php.ini file and turn cookies on:
session.use_cookies = 1
I thought sessions worked without cookies...in fact I know they SHOULD...but this fixed my problem at least until I can understand what may be going on in the bigger picture.
I've been struggling with this for days, checking/trying all the solutions, but my problem was I didn't call session_start(); again after the redirect. I just assumed the session was 'still alive'.
So don't forget that!
Nothing worked for me but I found what caused the problem (and solved it):
Check your browser cookies and make sure that there are no php session cookies on different subdomains (like one for "www.website.com" and one for "website.com").
This was caused by a javascript that incorrectly used the subdomain to set cookies and to open pages in iframes.
KEY POINT'S
Do not start a session on the return page.
Don't use session variable and not include header.php which user session variable
Just make a link go to home page or profile page after insert payment info and status
I had the same problem and found the easiest way.
I simply redirected to a redirect .html with 1 line of JS
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<script type="text/javascript">
<!--
window.location = "admin_index.php";
//–>
</script>
</html>
instead of PHP
header_remove();
header('Location: admin_login.php');
die;
I hope this helps.
Love
Gram
If you are using session_set_cookie_params() you might want to check if you are passing the fourth param $secure as true. If you are, then you need to access the url using https.
The $secure param being true means the Session is only available within a secure request. This might affect you locally more than in stage or production environments.
Mentioning it because I just spent most of today trying to find this issue, and this is what solved it for me. I was just added to this project and no one mentioned that it required https.
So you can either use https locally, or you can set the $secure param to FALSE and then use http locally. Just be sure to set it back to true when you push your changes up.
Depending on your local server, you might have to edit DocumentRoot in the httpd-ssl.conf of the server so that your local url is served https.
Another possible reason:
That is my server storage space. My server disk space become full. So, I have removed few files and folders in my server and tried.
It was worked!!!
I am saving my session in AWS Dynamo DB, but it still expects some space in my server to process the session. Not sure why!!!
ini_set('session.save_path',realpath(dirname($_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT']) . '/../session'));
session_start();
Too late to reply but this worked for me
To me this was permission error and this resolved it:
chown -R nginx:nginx /var/opt/remi/php73/lib/php/session
I have tested a few hours on PHP and the last test I did was that I created two files session1.php and session2.php.
session1.php:
session_start();
$_SESSION["user"] = 123;
header("Location: session2.php");
session2.php:
session_start();
print_r($_SESSION);
and it was printing an empty array.
At this point, I thought it could be a server issue and in fact, it was.
Hope this helps someone.
Verify that your session is not Strict. If it is, when you come back, like coming back from Stripe, it regenerate the session.
Use This:
ini_set('session.cookie_samesite', 'Lax');
I also had the same issue with the redirect not working and tried all the solutions I could find, my header redirect was being used in a form.
I solved it by putting the header redirect in a different php page 'signin_action.php' and passing the variables parameters through I wanted in url parameters and then reassigning them in the 'signin_action.php' form.
signin.php
if($stmt->num_rows>0) {
$_SESSION['username'] = $_POST['username'];
echo '<script>window.location.href = "http://'.$root.'/includes/functions/signin_action.php?username='.$_SESSION['username'].'";</script>';
error_reporting(E_ALL);
signin_action.php
<?php
require('../../config/init.php');
$_SESSION['username'] = $_GET['username'];
if ($_SESSION['username']) {
echo '<script>window.location.href = "http://'.$root.'/user/index.php";</script>';
exit();
} else {
echo 'Session not set';
}
?>
It is not a beautiful work-around but it worked.
For me the error was that I tried to save an unserialisable object in the session so that an exception was thrown while trying to write the session. But since all my error handling code had already ceased any operation I never saw the error.
I could find it in the Apache error logs, though.
Just for the record... I had this problem and after a few hours of trying everything the problem was that the disk was full, and php sessions could not be written into the tmp directory... so if you have this problem check that too...
For me, Firefox has stored session id (PHPSESSID) in a cookie, but Google Chrome has used GET or POST parameter.
So you only have to ensure that the returning script (for me: paypal checkout) commit PHPSESSID in url or POST parameter.
After trying many solutions here on SO and other blogs... what worked for me was adding .htaccess to my website root.
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^yoursitename.com$
RewriteRule ^.*$ "http\:\/\/www\.yoursitename\.com" [R=301,L]
If you're using Wordpress, I had to add this hook and start the session on init:
function register_my_session() {
if (!session_id()) {
session_start();
}
}
add_action('init', 'register_my_session');
First of all, make sure you are calling session_start() before using $_SESSION variable.
If you have disabled error reporting, try to turn in on and see the result.
ini_set('display_errors', 1);
ini_set('display_startup_errors', 1);
error_reporting(E_ALL);
The most common reasons that aren't mentioned in #dayuloli's answer:
Disk space problem. Make sure your disk space is not full, you need some space to store session files.
Session directory may not be writable. You can check it with is_writable(session_save_path())
I was having the same problem and I went nuts searching in my code for the answer. Finally I found my hosting recently updated the PHP version on my server and didn't correctly set up the session_save_path parameter on the php.ini file.
So, if someone reads this, please check php.ini config before anything else.
Make sure session_write_close is not called between session_start() and when you set your session.
session_start();
[...]
session_write_close();
[...]
$_SESSION['name']='Bob'; //<-- won't save
If you are using Laravel and you experience this issue, what you need is to save your session data before redirecting.
session()->save();
// Redirect the user to the authorization URL.
header('Location: ' . $authorizationUrl);
exit;
Now that GDPR is a thing, people visiting this question probably use a cookie script. Well, that script caused the problem for me. Apparently, PHP uses a cookie called PHPSESSID to track the session. If that script deletes it, you lose your data.
I used this cookie script. It has an option to enable "essential" cookies. I added PHPSESSID to the list, the script stopped deleting the cookie, and everything started to work again.
You could probably enable some PHP setting to avoid using PHPSESSID, but if your cookie script is the cause of the problem, why not fix that.
I fixed this problem after many days of debugging and it was all because my return URL coming from PayPal Express Checkout didn't have a 'www'. Chrome recognized that the domains should be treated the same but other browsers sometimes didn't. When using sessions/cookies and absolute paths, don't forget the 'www'!

JQuery's $.post returns 403 Forbidden on the same domain

I'm having issues with jquery's $.post function, and (what I think) the cross-domain security thing.
The weird part is that the page I'm trying to post to, is in the same directory as the page that sends the post.
This is the javascript code of 'latest.php', the file that makes the post request:
$.post("upload.php", { base64: fCanvas, description: description }, function(data){
// some things happen here
});
upload.php is a php script that uploads the content of the base64 variable to Tumblr.
The javascript console shows a 403 Forbidden error. I tried chmodding -777 'upload.php', but that didn't change anything.
Using $.get instead of $.post works, but is undesired due to security reasons, and the length limit of $get data (I'm sending a base64 encoded image).
EDIT: I changed one of the $.get requests on 'latest.php' to a $.post one, and it's working...
$.post("base64.php", { url: t_url },
function(data){
data = "data:image/gif;base64,"+data;
draw(data);
});
So, I'm completely clueless of what's going wrong.
403 Forbidden is a server-generated response and has nothing to do with the "Same Origin Policy". Can't really offer any help further than that, but it's going to be configuration related - not a cross-domain issue.
Edit: I was going to suggest that it was a lack of execute permissions, but you already did the 777 chmod, and you can hit it with a GET, which is kind of perplexing. For the sake of not being completely useless, here's a link that suggests you need to use 644 instead of 777.
Another suggestion: is mod_security enabled in your .htaccess (or other config)? It's known to be unfriendly towards form values that contain stuff like markup/urls or other potential XSS attempts.
Well. I got it working.
I tried sending a smaller (still base64-encoded) image to my upload.php script, and it did the job. It appears that jQuery's post function can't handle large (thats relative, it's just a 640x453 image) amounts of data.
I solved the problem by using a XMLHttpRequest() instead. It works like a charm.
If anybody knows the exact problem with jQuery's Ajax, please let me know, because I still don't know exactly why my data caused a HTTP Forbidden error.
hi the forbidden error it's because uses post method and in the server side CORS are not implemented to work with Client CORS
check mod_security with your hosting provider!
the most issues similar to this solved when whitelisted or disabled it!
Try using a absolute link (has worked for me).

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