Class Cookie

  • All Implemented Interfaces:
    java.io.Serializable, java.lang.Cloneable


    public class Cookie
    extends java.lang.Object
    implements java.lang.Cloneable, java.io.Serializable
    Creates a cookie, a small amount of information sent by a servlet to a Web browser, saved by the browser, and later sent back to the server. A cookie's value can uniquely identify a client, so cookies are commonly used for session management.

    A cookie has a name, a single value, and optional attributes such as a comment, path and domain qualifiers, a maximum age, and a version number. Some Web browsers have bugs in how they handle the optional attributes, so use them sparingly to improve the interoperability of your servlets.

    The servlet sends cookies to the browser by using the HttpServletResponse.addCookie(javax.servlet.http.Cookie) method, which adds fields to HTTP response headers to send cookies to the browser, one at a time. The browser is expected to support 20 cookies for each Web server, 300 cookies total, and may limit cookie size to 4 KB each.

    The browser returns cookies to the servlet by adding fields to HTTP request headers. Cookies can be retrieved from a request by using the HttpServletRequest.getCookies() method. Several cookies might have the same name but different path attributes.

    Cookies affect the caching of the Web pages that use them. HTTP 1.0 does not cache pages that use cookies created with this class. This class does not support the cache control defined with HTTP 1.1.

    This class supports both the Version 0 (by Netscape) and Version 1 (by RFC 2109) cookie specifications. By default, cookies are created using Version 0 to ensure the best interoperability.

    See Also:
    Serialized Form
    • Constructor Summary

      Constructors 
      Constructor Description
      Cookie​(java.lang.String name, java.lang.String value)
      Constructs a cookie with the specified name and value.
    • Method Summary

      All Methods Instance Methods Concrete Methods 
      Modifier and Type Method Description
      java.lang.Object clone​()
      Overrides the standard java.lang.Object.clone method to return a copy of this Cookie.
      java.lang.String getComment​()
      Returns the comment describing the purpose of this cookie, or null if the cookie has no comment.
      java.lang.String getDomain​()
      Gets the domain name of this Cookie.
      int getMaxAge​()
      Gets the maximum age in seconds of this Cookie.
      java.lang.String getName​()
      Returns the name of the cookie.
      java.lang.String getPath​()
      Returns the path on the server to which the browser returns this cookie.
      boolean getSecure​()
      Returns true if the browser is sending cookies only over a secure protocol, or false if the browser can send cookies using any protocol.
      java.lang.String getValue​()
      Gets the current value of this Cookie.
      int getVersion​()
      Returns the version of the protocol this cookie complies with.
      boolean isHttpOnly​()
      Checks whether this Cookie has been marked as HttpOnly.
      void setComment​(java.lang.String purpose)
      Specifies a comment that describes a cookie's purpose.
      void setDomain​(java.lang.String domain)
      Specifies the domain within which this cookie should be presented.
      void setHttpOnly​(boolean isHttpOnly)
      Marks or unmarks this Cookie as HttpOnly.
      void setMaxAge​(int expiry)
      Sets the maximum age in seconds for this Cookie.
      void setPath​(java.lang.String uri)
      Specifies a path for the cookie to which the client should return the cookie.
      void setSecure​(boolean flag)
      Indicates to the browser whether the cookie should only be sent using a secure protocol, such as HTTPS or SSL.
      void setValue​(java.lang.String newValue)
      Assigns a new value to this Cookie.
      void setVersion​(int v)
      Sets the version of the cookie protocol that this Cookie complies with.
      • Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object

        equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
    • Constructor Detail

      • Cookie

        public Cookie​(java.lang.String name,
                      java.lang.String value)
        Constructs a cookie with the specified name and value.

        The name must conform to RFC 2109. However, vendors may provide a configuration option that allows cookie names conforming to the original Netscape Cookie Specification to be accepted.

        The name of a cookie cannot be changed once the cookie has been created.

        The value can be anything the server chooses to send. Its value is probably of interest only to the server. The cookie's value can be changed after creation with the setValue method.

        By default, cookies are created according to the Netscape cookie specification. The version can be changed with the setVersion method.

        Parameters:
        name - the name of the cookie
        value - the value of the cookie
        Throws:
        java.lang.IllegalArgumentException - if the cookie name is null or empty or contains any illegal characters (for example, a comma, space, or semicolon) or matches a token reserved for use by the cookie protocol
        See Also:
        setValue(java.lang.String), setVersion(int)
    • Method Detail

      • setComment

        public void setComment​(java.lang.String purpose)
        Specifies a comment that describes a cookie's purpose. The comment is useful if the browser presents the cookie to the user. Comments are not supported by Netscape Version 0 cookies.
        Parameters:
        purpose - a String specifying the comment to display to the user
        See Also:
        getComment()
      • getComment

        public java.lang.String getComment​()
        Returns the comment describing the purpose of this cookie, or null if the cookie has no comment.
        Returns:
        the comment of the cookie, or null if unspecified
        See Also:
        setComment(java.lang.String)
      • setDomain

        public void setDomain​(java.lang.String domain)
        Specifies the domain within which this cookie should be presented.

        The form of the domain name is specified by RFC 2109. A domain name begins with a dot (.foo.com) and means that the cookie is visible to servers in a specified Domain Name System (DNS) zone (for example, www.foo.com, but not a.b.foo.com). By default, cookies are only returned to the server that sent them.

        Parameters:
        domain - the domain name within which this cookie is visible; form is according to RFC 2109
        See Also:
        getDomain()
      • getDomain

        public java.lang.String getDomain​()
        Gets the domain name of this Cookie.

        Domain names are formatted according to RFC 2109.

        Returns:
        the domain name of this Cookie
        See Also:
        setDomain(java.lang.String)
      • setMaxAge

        public void setMaxAge​(int expiry)
        Sets the maximum age in seconds for this Cookie.

        A positive value indicates that the cookie will expire after that many seconds have passed. Note that the value is the maximum age when the cookie will expire, not the cookie's current age.

        A negative value means that the cookie is not stored persistently and will be deleted when the Web browser exits. A zero value causes the cookie to be deleted.

        Parameters:
        expiry - an integer specifying the maximum age of the cookie in seconds; if negative, means the cookie is not stored; if zero, deletes the cookie
        See Also:
        getMaxAge()
      • getMaxAge

        public int getMaxAge​()
        Gets the maximum age in seconds of this Cookie.

        By default, -1 is returned, which indicates that the cookie will persist until browser shutdown.

        Returns:
        an integer specifying the maximum age of the cookie in seconds; if negative, means the cookie persists until browser shutdown
        See Also:
        setMaxAge(int)
      • setPath

        public void setPath​(java.lang.String uri)
        Specifies a path for the cookie to which the client should return the cookie.

        The cookie is visible to all the pages in the directory you specify, and all the pages in that directory's subdirectories. A cookie's path must include the servlet that set the cookie, for example, /catalog, which makes the cookie visible to all directories on the server under /catalog.

        Consult RFC 2109 (available on the Internet) for more information on setting path names for cookies.

        Parameters:
        uri - a String specifying a path
        See Also:
        getPath()
      • getPath

        public java.lang.String getPath​()
        Returns the path on the server to which the browser returns this cookie. The cookie is visible to all subpaths on the server.
        Returns:
        a String specifying a path that contains a servlet name, for example, /catalog
        See Also:
        setPath(java.lang.String)
      • setSecure

        public void setSecure​(boolean flag)
        Indicates to the browser whether the cookie should only be sent using a secure protocol, such as HTTPS or SSL.

        The default value is false.

        Parameters:
        flag - if true, sends the cookie from the browser to the server only when using a secure protocol; if false, sent on any protocol
        See Also:
        getSecure()
      • getSecure

        public boolean getSecure​()
        Returns true if the browser is sending cookies only over a secure protocol, or false if the browser can send cookies using any protocol.
        Returns:
        true if the browser uses a secure protocol, false otherwise
        See Also:
        setSecure(boolean)
      • getName

        public java.lang.String getName​()
        Returns the name of the cookie. The name cannot be changed after creation.
        Returns:
        the name of the cookie
      • setValue

        public void setValue​(java.lang.String newValue)
        Assigns a new value to this Cookie.

        If you use a binary value, you may want to use BASE64 encoding.

        With Version 0 cookies, values should not contain white space, brackets, parentheses, equals signs, commas, double quotes, slashes, question marks, at signs, colons, and semicolons. Empty values may not behave the same way on all browsers.

        Parameters:
        newValue - the new value of the cookie
        See Also:
        getValue()
      • getValue

        public java.lang.String getValue​()
        Gets the current value of this Cookie.
        Returns:
        the current value of this Cookie
        See Also:
        setValue(java.lang.String)
      • getVersion

        public int getVersion​()
        Returns the version of the protocol this cookie complies with. Version 1 complies with RFC 2109, and version 0 complies with the original cookie specification drafted by Netscape. Cookies provided by a browser use and identify the browser's cookie version.
        Returns:
        0 if the cookie complies with the original Netscape specification; 1 if the cookie complies with RFC 2109
        See Also:
        setVersion(int)
      • setVersion

        public void setVersion​(int v)
        Sets the version of the cookie protocol that this Cookie complies with.

        Version 0 complies with the original Netscape cookie specification. Version 1 complies with RFC 2109.

        Since RFC 2109 is still somewhat new, consider version 1 as experimental; do not use it yet on production sites.

        Parameters:
        v - 0 if the cookie should comply with the original Netscape specification; 1 if the cookie should comply with RFC 2109
        See Also:
        getVersion()
      • clone

        public java.lang.Object clone​()
        Overrides the standard java.lang.Object.clone method to return a copy of this Cookie.
        Overrides:
        clone in class java.lang.Object
      • setHttpOnly

        public void setHttpOnly​(boolean isHttpOnly)
        Marks or unmarks this Cookie as HttpOnly.

        If isHttpOnly is set to true, this cookie is marked as HttpOnly, by adding the HttpOnly attribute to it.

        HttpOnly cookies are not supposed to be exposed to client-side scripting code, and may therefore help mitigate certain kinds of cross-site scripting attacks.

        Parameters:
        isHttpOnly - true if this cookie is to be marked as HttpOnly, false otherwise
        Since:
        Servlet 3.0
      • isHttpOnly

        public boolean isHttpOnly​()
        Checks whether this Cookie has been marked as HttpOnly.
        Returns:
        true if this Cookie has been marked as HttpOnly, false otherwise
        Since:
        Servlet 3.0