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Server-side integration

There are some servers that are not compliant with the RFC 6265. For those, some characters that are not encoded by JavaScript Cookie might be treated differently.

Here we document the most important server-side peculiarities and their workarounds. Feel free to send a Pull Request if you see something that can be improved.

Disclaimer: This documentation is entirely based on community provided information. The examples below should be used only as a reference.

PHP

In PHP, setcookie() function encodes cookie values using urlencode() function, which applies %-encoding but also encodes spaces as + signs, for historical reasons. When cookies are read back via $_COOKIE or filter_input(INPUT_COOKIE), they would go trough a decoding process which decodes %-encoded sequences and also converts + signs back to spaces. However, the plus (+) sign is valid cookie character by itself, which means that libraries that adhere to standards will interpret + signs differently to PHP.

This presents two types of problems:

  1. PHP writes a cookie via setcookie() and all spaces get converted to + signs. JavaScript Cookie read + signs and uses them literally, since it is a valid cookie character.
  2. JavaScript Cookie writes a cookie with a value that contains + signs and stores it as is, since it is a valid cookie character. PHP read a cookie and converts + signs to spaces.

To make both PHP and JavaScript Cookie play nicely together?

In PHP, use setrawcookie() instead of setcookie():

setrawcookie($name, rawurlencode($value));

In JavaScript, use a custom converter.

Example:

var PHPCookies = Cookies.withConverter({
  write: Cookies.converter.write,
  read: function (value) {
    // Decode the plus sign to spaces first, otherwise "legit" encoded pluses
    // will be replaced incorrectly
    value = value.replace(/\+/g, ' ')
    // Decode all characters according to the "encodeURIComponent" spec
    return Cookies.converter.read(value)
  }
})

Rack seems to have a similar problem.

Tomcat

Version >= 7.x

It seems that there is a situation where Tomcat does not read the parens correctly. To fix this you need to write a custom write converter.

Example:

var TomcatCookies = Cookies.withConverter({
  write: function (value) {
    return (
      Cookies.converter
        .write(value)
        // Encode the parens that are interpreted incorrectly by Tomcat
        .replace(/[()]/g, escape)
    )
  },
  read: Cookies.converter.read
})

Version >= 8.0.15

Since Tomcat 8.0.15, it is possible to configure RFC 6265 compliance by changing your conf/context.xml file and adding the new CookieProcessor nested inside the Context element. It would be like this:

<Context>
  <CookieProcessor className="org.apache.tomcat.util.http.Rfc6265CookieProcessor"/>
</context>

And you're all done.

Alternatively, you can check the Java Cookie project, which integrates nicely with JavaScript Cookie.

JBoss 7.1.1

It seems that the servlet implementation of JBoss 7.1.1 does not read some characters correctly, even though they are allowed as per RFC 6265. To fix this you need to write a custom converter to send those characters correctly.

Example:

var JBossCookies = Cookies.withConverter({
  write: function (value) {
    return (
      Cookies.converter
        .write(value)
        // Encode again the characters that are not allowed in JBoss 7.1.1, like "[" and "]":
        .replace(/[[\]]/g, encodeURIComponent)
    )
  },
  read: Cookies.converter.read
})

Alternatively, you can check the Java Cookie project, which integrates nicely with JavaScript Cookie.

Express

Express handles cookies with JSON by prepending a j: prefix to verify if it contains a JSON value later.

An example to solve this:

Write

// Client
Cookies.set('name', 'j:' + JSON.stringify({ key: value }))

// Or in Express server to prevent prepending of j: prefix
res.cookie('name', JSON.stringify({ key: value }))

Read

// Client
JSON.parse(Cookies.get('name').slice(2))

// Express already parses JSON cookies if `cookie-parser` middleware is installed.
// If you used the solution for Express above:
JSON.parse(req.cookies.name)

However, it's still quite a handful to do. To avoid that situation, writing a custom converter is recommended.

Example:

var ExpressCookies = Cookies.withConverter({
  write: function (value) {
    // Prepend j: prefix if it is JSON object
    try {
      var tmp = JSON.parse(value)
      if (typeof tmp !== 'object') {
        throw new Error()
      }
      value = 'j:' + JSON.stringify(tmp)
    } catch (e) {}

    return Cookies.converter.write(value)
  },
  read: function (value) {
    value = Cookies.converter.read(value)

    // Check if the value contains j: prefix otherwise return as is
    return value.slice(0, 2) === 'j:' ? value.slice(2) : value
  }
})