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1<?php 2 3use Illuminate\Support\Str; 4 5return [ 6 7 /* 8 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 | Default Session Driver 10 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 | 12 | This option determines the default session driver that is utilized for 13 | incoming requests. Laravel supports a variety of storage options to 14 | persist session data. Database storage is a great default choice. 15 | 16 | Supported: "file", "cookie", "database", "memcached", 17 | "redis", "dynamodb", "array" 18 | 19 */ 20 21 'driver' => env('SESSION_DRIVER', 'database'), 22 23 /* 24 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 25 | Session Lifetime 26 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 27 | 28 | Here you may specify the number of minutes that you wish the session 29 | to be allowed to remain idle before it expires. If you want them 30 | to expire immediately when the browser is closed then you may 31 | indicate that via the expire_on_close configuration option. 32 | 33 */ 34 35 'lifetime' => (int) env('SESSION_LIFETIME', 120), 36 37 'expire_on_close' => env('SESSION_EXPIRE_ON_CLOSE', false), 38 39 /* 40 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 41 | Session Encryption 42 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 43 | 44 | This option allows you to easily specify that all of your session data 45 | should be encrypted before it's stored. All encryption is performed 46 | automatically by Laravel and you may use the session like normal. 47 | 48 */ 49 50 'encrypt' => env('SESSION_ENCRYPT', false), 51 52 /* 53 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 54 | Session File Location 55 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 56 | 57 | When utilizing the "file" session driver, the session files are placed 58 | on disk. The default storage location is defined here; however, you 59 | are free to provide another location where they should be stored. 60 | 61 */ 62 63 'files' => storage_path('framework/sessions'), 64 65 /* 66 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 67 | Session Database Connection 68 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 69 | 70 | When using the "database" or "redis" session drivers, you may specify a 71 | connection that should be used to manage these sessions. This should 72 | correspond to a connection in your database configuration options. 73 | 74 */ 75 76 'connection' => env('SESSION_CONNECTION'), 77 78 /* 79 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 80 | Session Database Table 81 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 82 | 83 | When using the "database" session driver, you may specify the table to 84 | be used to store sessions. Of course, a sensible default is defined 85 | for you; however, you're welcome to change this to another table. 86 | 87 */ 88 89 'table' => env('SESSION_TABLE', 'sessions'), 90 91 /* 92 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 93 | Session Cache Store 94 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 95 | 96 | When using one of the framework's cache driven session backends, you may 97 | define the cache store which should be used to store the session data 98 | between requests. This must match one of your defined cache stores. 99 | 100 | Affects: "dynamodb", "memcached", "redis" 101 | 102 */ 103 104 'store' => env('SESSION_STORE'), 105 106 /* 107 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 108 | Session Sweeping Lottery 109 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 110 | 111 | Some session drivers must manually sweep their storage location to get 112 | rid of old sessions from storage. Here are the chances that it will 113 | happen on a given request. By default, the odds are 2 out of 100. 114 | 115 */ 116 117 'lottery' => [2, 100], 118 119 /* 120 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 121 | Session Cookie Name 122 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 123 | 124 | Here you may change the name of the session cookie that is created by 125 | the framework. Typically, you should not need to change this value 126 | since doing so does not grant a meaningful security improvement. 127 | 128 */ 129 130 'cookie' => env( 131 'SESSION_COOKIE', 132 Str::slug((string) env('APP_NAME', 'laravel')).'-session' 133 ), 134 135 /* 136 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 137 | Session Cookie Path 138 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 139 | 140 | The session cookie path determines the path for which the cookie will 141 | be regarded as available. Typically, this will be the root path of 142 | your application, but you're free to change this when necessary. 143 | 144 */ 145 146 'path' => env('SESSION_PATH', '/'), 147 148 /* 149 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 150 | Session Cookie Domain 151 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 152 | 153 | This value determines the domain and subdomains the session cookie is 154 | available to. By default, the cookie will be available to the root 155 | domain and all subdomains. Typically, this shouldn't be changed. 156 | 157 */ 158 159 'domain' => env('SESSION_DOMAIN'), 160 161 /* 162 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 163 | HTTPS Only Cookies 164 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 165 | 166 | By setting this option to true, session cookies will only be sent back 167 | to the server if the browser has a HTTPS connection. This will keep 168 | the cookie from being sent to you when it can't be done securely. 169 | 170 */ 171 172 'secure' => env('SESSION_SECURE_COOKIE'), 173 174 /* 175 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 176 | HTTP Access Only 177 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 178 | 179 | Setting this value to true will prevent JavaScript from accessing the 180 | value of the cookie and the cookie will only be accessible through 181 | the HTTP protocol. It's unlikely you should disable this option. 182 | 183 */ 184 185 'http_only' => env('SESSION_HTTP_ONLY', true), 186 187 /* 188 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 189 | Same-Site Cookies 190 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 191 | 192 | This option determines how your cookies behave when cross-site requests 193 | take place, and can be used to mitigate CSRF attacks. By default, we 194 | will set this value to "lax" to permit secure cross-site requests. 195 | 196 | See: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Set-Cookie#samesitesamesite-value 197 | 198 | Supported: "lax", "strict", "none", null 199 | 200 */ 201 202 'same_site' => env('SESSION_SAME_SITE', 'lax'), 203 204 /* 205 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 206 | Partitioned Cookies 207 |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 208 | 209 | Setting this value to true will tie the cookie to the top-level site for 210 | a cross-site context. Partitioned cookies are accepted by the browser 211 | when flagged "secure" and the Same-Site attribute is set to "none". 212 | 213 */ 214 215 'partitioned' => env('SESSION_PARTITIONED_COOKIE', false), 216 217];