* @since 2.0 */ class Cookie extends \yii\base\BaseObject { /** * SameSite policy Lax will prevent the cookie from being sent by the browser in all cross-site browsing context * during CSRF-prone request methods (e.g. POST, PUT, PATCH etc). * E.g. a POST request from https://otherdomain.com to https://yourdomain.com will not include the cookie, however a GET request will. * When a user follows a link from https://otherdomain.com to https://yourdomain.com it will include the cookie * @see $sameSite */ const SAME_SITE_LAX = 'Lax'; /** * SameSite policy Strict will prevent the cookie from being sent by the browser in all cross-site browsing context * regardless of the request method and even when following a regular link. * E.g. a GET request from https://otherdomain.com to https://yourdomain.com or a user following a link from * https://otherdomain.com to https://yourdomain.com will not include the cookie. * @see $sameSite */ const SAME_SITE_STRICT = 'Strict'; /** * SameSite policy None disables the SameSite policy so cookies will be sent in all contexts, * i.e in responses to both first-party and cross-origin requests. * E.g. a POST request from https://otherdomain.com to https://yourdomain.com will include the cookie. * Note: If `sameSite` is set to None, the `secure` attribute must be set to `true` (otherwise the cookie will be blocked by the browser). * @see $sameSite * @see $secure * @since 2.0.43 */ const SAME_SITE_NONE = 'None'; /** * @var string name of the cookie */ public $name; /** * @var string value of the cookie */ public $value = ''; /** * @var string domain of the cookie */ public $domain = ''; /** * @var int the timestamp at which the cookie expires. This is the server timestamp. * Defaults to 0, meaning "until the browser is closed". */ public $expire = 0; /** * @var string the path on the server in which the cookie will be available on. The default is '/'. */ public $path = '/'; /** * @var bool whether cookie should be sent via secure connection */ public $secure = false; /** * @var bool whether the cookie should be accessible only through the HTTP protocol. * By setting this property to true, the cookie will not be accessible by scripting languages, * such as JavaScript, which can effectively help to reduce identity theft through XSS attacks. */ public $httpOnly = true; /** * @var string SameSite prevents the browser from sending this cookie along with cross-site requests. * * See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Set-Cookie/SameSite for more information about sameSite. * * @since 2.0.21 */ public $sameSite = self::SAME_SITE_LAX; /** * Magic method to turn a cookie object into a string without having to explicitly access [[value]]. * * ```php * if (isset($request->cookies['name'])) { * $value = (string) $request->cookies['name']; * } * ``` * * @return string The value of the cookie. If the value property is null, an empty string will be returned. */ public function __toString() { return (string) $this->value; } }