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<?phprequire_once('utils.inc.php');
 require_once('../handlers/stackSess.inc.php');
 require_once('../handlers/nonBlocking.inc.php');
 require_once('../handlers/writeSometimes.inc.php');
 
 session_name('SESS_SN');
 
 logger("started");
 $storage=new nonBlockingHandler();
 $storage->setLogger('logger');
 $handler=new writeSometimes($storage);
 $handler->setLogger('logger');
 
 if (!$handler->install()) {
 print "set handler failed";
 exit;
 }
 logger("* about to call session_start()");
 
 session_start();
 if (!isset($_SESSION['c'])) $_SESSION['c']=0;
 
 if ((integer)$_SESSION['c'] && !($_SESSION['c'] % 3)) {
 logger("* about to regenerate");
 session_regenerate_id();
 if (version_compare(PHP_VERSION, '5.5.1') < 0) {
 $handler->create_sid('dummy string');
 }
 }
 if ((integer)$_SESSION['c'] && !($_SESSION['c']=10)) {
 logger("triggering gc");
 $handler->gc(6400);
 }
 logger("about to finish");
 session_write_close();
 ?>
 <html>
 <H1>The write Sometimes Handler + non Blocking storage</H1>
 <p>
 <p>This combination should give good performance characterisitcs - but see the pages
 for each seperate handler for thecaveats.<br />
 This handler only passes on writes to the lower layer if:
 <ul>
 <li>The session has changed</li>
 <li>The session ID has changed</li>
 <li>The session has reached 70% of its TTL</li>
 </ul>
 </p><p>
 While the other demos change the session each time, this only increments
 the counter based on a throw of the dice so you see the effect of
 omitting the write. That means it has 3 distinct behaviours:
 <ul>
 <li>no write</li>
 <li>write session</li>
 <li>write session with new session id</li>
 </ul>
 </p><p>
 The logging output of the handler is shown below:<br />
 <?php
 print "OK:++\$_SESSION['c']=" . $_SESSION['c'] . "<pre>$statuslog</pre>";
 exit;
 
 
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