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Reading duplicated cookies #60
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Hi @a-x-, that is correct, since the interface of this module only provides one value per name, so the first occurrence is chosen. I guess we can either completely change the interface to allow you to get all the values for a given name or we can change which one we can get if you can provide a link to some specification that says which occurrence we should actually be reading (the first or the last in your example). It is perfectly legal for a web browser to send a Having a cookie with an empty value is a perfectly value cookie, so simply skipping over those a preferring ones with values is not on option, unless you know of a specification that says servers should be doing this. |
oh, thank you it's a kind of shit:
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6265#section-4.2.2 So, there I see the solution. Can you add into your cookie parser conf something like «same keys order policy»? e.g.: |
You can use the |
Cool, feel fee to make a PR. If you at foing to recommend "last" in the documentation, you'll probably need to explain why one should choose "last" over "first", especially since that spec says do not rely on order, so it says doing either is equally bad, neither is recommended. Perhaps it would be better to rewrite the interface to allow retrieval of all the cookies? |
Hi, It could be a method with another name or an option. |
Any workaround or alternative package to read multiple cookies (having the same key)? Edit:
|
As a warning, if you are specifying |
I noticed the description of the new feature says "All values will be put into an array." but the implementation actually returns either a string if it's a single value or an array if it's multiple values. When a multi-valued cookies setting is enabled, it might be more convenient to always return an array (even for one value) instead of either a string or an array, because the application is already expecting that there could be multiple values and be ready to handle them. Instead of having to check whether it got a string or an array, the application could just start processing the array. For example, in the case of receiving some empty cookie values: let session_id = null;
const cookies = cookie.parse(...);
if (typeof cookies.session_id === 'string') {
if (cookies.session_id) { session_id = cookies.session_id }
} else if (Array.isArray(cookies.session_id)) {
const nonempty = cookies.session_id.filter((item) => item.trim().length > 0);
if (nonempty.length > 0) { session_id = nonempty[0]; } // arbitrary choice
}
if (!session_id) { /* no cookie */ } But if the value is always an array (when multi-valued setting is enabled), there are less cases when checking the result: let session_id = null;
const cookies = cookie.parse(...);
if (cookies.session_id) {
const nonempty = cookies.session_id.filter((item) => item.trim().length > 0);
if (nonempty.length > 0) { session_id = nonempty[0]; } // arbitrary choice
}
if (!session_id) { /* no cookie */ } The difference becomes even greater if there are other things to check, like if the value is a valid cookie value. Because then you have to either 1) check it in the string section and in the array section, which results in a little duplication, or 2) to avoid the duplication you need to check if the value is string or array, convert string to [string], then process the array. Even the PR shows this issue when preparing the output: // only assign once unless multiValuedCookies is true
if (undefined == obj[key]) {
obj[key] = tryDecode(val, dec);
} else if (opt.multiValuedCookies) {
if (typeof obj[key] === 'string') {
obj[key] = [obj[key], tryDecode(val, dec)];
} else {
obj[key].push(tryDecode(val, dec));
}
} But if multi-valued cookies are always in an array, it could be like this instead: // only assign once unless multiValuedCookies is true
if (opt.multiValuedCookies) {
if (undefined == obj[key]) {
obj[key] = [];
}
obj[key].push(tryDecode(val, dec));
} else if (undefined == obj[key]) {
obj[key] = tryDecode(val, dec);
} It's one less level of nested if's, and if you write in modern javascript and transpile to backward-compatible javascript, it's even cleaner: // only assign once unless multiValuedCookies is true
if (opt.multiValuedCookies) {
obj[key] ??= [];
obj[key].push(tryDecode(val, dec));
} else if (undefined == obj[key]) {
obj[key] = tryDecode(val, dec);
} |
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Ok, we fork and merge #108 PR and publish package on |
my bro sends weird cookies (after deleting and installing cookies again):
cookie-parser
parse e.g.user_id
as a''
but expected reading a latest value of each cookie
expressjs/cookie-parser#31
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