WebFund 2015W: Tutorial 4: Difference between revisions

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'''This tutorial is not yet finalized (and in fact is likely to change radically).'''
In this tutorial you will examine [http://homeostasis.scs.carleton.ca/~soma/webfund-2015w/code/session-demo.zip session-demo], a simple node express application that demonstrates session support.  You will need to use the browser and node debugging tools described in the [[WebFund 2015W: Tutorial 2|Tutorial 2]].
In this tutorial you will examine [http://homeostasis.scs.carleton.ca/~soma/webfund-2015w/code/session-demo.zip session-demo], a simple node express application that demonstrates session support.  You will need to use the browser and node debugging tools described in the [[WebFund 2015W: Tutorial 2|Tutorial 2]].



Revision as of 17:03, 31 January 2015

This tutorial is not yet finalized (and in fact is likely to change radically).

In this tutorial you will examine session-demo, a simple node express application that demonstrates session support. You will need to use the browser and node debugging tools described in the Tutorial 2.

In this tutorial you should do the following:

  • Get session-demo running.
  • Try logging in to the app using two different browsers (e.g., Firefox and Chrome). What happens when you logout from one browser - how does it affect the other?
  • Observe the request and response for the app's home page (http://localhost:3000). Look at both the network panel (load the page after selecting the network panel) and the HTML DOM view (Inspector/Elements)
  • Observe the contents of the form submit POST request: how much data is sent to the server? Observe it both from the browser side (to see what is sent) and inside of node, particularly where the POST results are returned.
  • The session state is stored in the browser. Can you figure out the user's username from this information?
  • What does the req.body and req.session look like just before a page gets rendered?


To get checked off, show a TA the following:

  • A session cookie sent by the browser
  • A session cookie stored on the server


Questions to ponder:

  • Who can observe the cookie? Modify it?
  • How "persistent" are sessions on the server? The client?
  • How could you "hijack" a session? Does the difficulty of session hijacking relate to whether a login is password protected or not?
  • How much code would you have to add to tinywebserver in order to get it to duplicate the functionality of session-demo?