Reputation: 24752
The time the cookie expires. This is a Unix timestamp so is in number of seconds since the epoch. In other words, you'll most likely set this with the time() function plus the number of seconds before you want it to expire. Or you might use mktime(). time()+60*60*24*30 will set the cookie to expire in 30 days. If set to 0, or omitted, the cookie will expire at the end of the session (when the browser closes).
Taken from:- http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.setcookie.php
Can anyone explain why is FireFox not deleting cookies with an unspecified expiry time on exit?
I've tested in Chrome, Opera and IE they all delete those cookies at exit.
Is this a Firefox bug?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 6021
Reputation: 1122
Firefox appears to require that you include all parameters, or it will ignore the expiration and treat the cookie as a session cookie
<?php setcookie( "name", "value", "past_timestamp", "path", "domain" ); ?>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 71140
Is a residual process running? Some plugins for FF get stuck as a background process when the browser is closed, or the download manager may still be open etc.. is FF definitely terminated?
Also, this may result from a profile corruption, trial with a new profile (run FF with firefox.exe -ProfileManager)
Also, see here:
http://forums.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?f=38&t=1465575
Notably regarding the corruption in the cookie manager:
The cookies file may have become corrupt. Since you are deleting all cookies try this: 1) Shut down Firefox. 2) Go to your profile. ( http://kb.mozillazine.org/Profile_folder_-_Firefox ) 3) Backup and rename the cookies.txt (if it exists) and cookies.sqlite files to a different name, i.e. old_xxxx
Upvotes: 0
Reputation:
Are you saving your tabs session when exiting Firefox? See this post for more.
Upvotes: 5