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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Changing hosting company for one domain, how to deal with DNS? Post 303043358 by solaris_1977 on Sunday 26th of January 2020 03:08:14 AM
Old 01-26-2020
Yes, I understand this metric. It is set to 3600. NS are pointed on Network Solutions, which says their minimum is also 3600. From their website - "Network Solutions® allows a minimum of 3600 (1 hour)"
Code:
[root@ext-dns-ns1 ~]# cat /var/named/master/db.xyxyxyxyx.com | head -14
$TTL    3600
@ IN  SOA dns1.xyxyxyxyx.com. id-chm.xyxyxyxyx.com.com.   (
                                        2020010172      ; Serial
                                        86400           ; Refresh
                                        7200            ; Retry
                                        3600000         ; Expire
                                        172800          ; TTL
                                                        )
;
                                IN  NS          dns1.tcs-sb.net.
                                IN  NS          dns2.tcs-sb.net.
                                IN  NS          dns3.tcs-sb.net.
                                IN  NS          dns4.tcs-sb.net.
;
[root@ext-dns-ns1 ~]#

 

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Mojolicious::Sessions(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				Mojolicious::Sessions(3pm)

NAME
Mojolicious::Sessions - Signed cookie based sessions SYNOPSIS
use Mojolicious::Sessions; my $sessions = Mojolicious::Sessions->new; DESCRIPTION
Mojolicious::Sessions is a very simple signed cookie based session implementation. All data gets serialized with Mojo::JSON and stored on the client-side, but is protected from unwanted changes with a signature. ATTRIBUTES
Mojolicious::Sessions implements the following attributes. "cookie_domain" my $domain = $session->cookie_domain; $session = $session->cookie_domain('.example.com'); Domain for session cookie, not defined by default. "cookie_name" my $name = $session->cookie_name; $session = $session->cookie_name('session'); Name of the signed cookie used to store session data, defaults to "mojolicious". "cookie_path" my $path = $session->cookie_path; $session = $session->cookie_path('/foo'); Path for session cookie, defaults to "/". "default_expiration" my $time = $session->default_expiration; $session = $session->default_expiration(3600); Time for the session to expire in seconds from now, defaults to 3600. The expiration timeout gets refreshed for every request. Setting the value to 0 will allow sessions to persist until the browser window is closed, this can have security implications though. For more control you can also use the "expires" session value to set the expiration date to a specific time in epoch seconds. # Expire a week from now $c->session(expires => time + 604800); # Expire a long long time ago $c->session(expires => 1); "secure" my $secure = $session->secure; $session = $session->secure(1); Set the secure flag on all session cookies, so that browsers send them only over HTTPS connections. METHODS
Mojolicious::Sessions inherits all methods from Mojo::Base and implements the following ones. "load" $session->load(Mojolicious::Controller->new); Load session data from signed cookie. "store" $session->store(Mojolicious::Controller->new); Store session data in signed cookie. SEE ALSO
Mojolicious, Mojolicious::Guides, <http://mojolicio.us>. perl v5.14.2 2012-09-05 Mojolicious::Sessions(3pm)
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