session_start hangs

since a few hours our server hangs every time you do a session_start.

For testing purposes i created a script which looks like this:

<?php
session_start();
?>

Calling it from the console hangs and it can't even be stopped with ctrl-c, only kill -9 works. The same for calling it via Apache. /var/lib/php/session/ stays empty but permissions are absolutely fine, www can write and also has read permissions for all parent folders.

According to the admins there were no changes made on the server and there is no special code registered for sessions. The Server is CentOS 4 or 5 and yesterday everything was working perfectly. We rebooted the server and updated PHP, but nothing changed.

I've ran out of ideas, any suggestions?

UPDATE

We solved this problem by moving the project to another server, so while the problem still exists on one server there is no immediate need for a solution anymore. I will keep the question open in case someone has an idea for others having a similar problem in the future, though.


Solution 1:

There are many reasons for that, here are a few of them:

A. The session file could be opened exclusively. When the file lock is not released properly for whatever reason, it is causing session_start() to hang infinitely on any future script executions. Workaround: use session_set_save_handler() and make sure the write function uses fopen($file, 'w') instead of fopen($file, 'x')

B. Never use the following in your php.ini file (entropie file to "/dev/random"), this will cause your session_start() to hang:

<?php
ini_set("session.entropy_file", "/dev/random");
ini_set("session.entropy_length", "512");
?>

C. session_start() needs a directory to write to.

You can get Apache plus PHP running in a normal user account. Apache will then of course have to listen to an other port than 80 (for instance, 8080).

Be sure to do the following things: - create a temporary directory PREFIX/tmp - put php.ini in PREFIX/lib - edit php.ini and set session.save_path to the directory you just created

Otherwise, your scripts will seem to 'hang' on session_start().

Solution 2:

If this helps:

In my scenario, session_start() was hanging at the same time I was using the XDebug debugger within PHPStorm, the IDE, on Windows. I found that there was a clear cause: Whenever I killed the debug session from within PHPStorm, the next time I tried to run a debug session, session_start() would hang.

The solution, if this is your scenario, is to make sure to restart Apache every time you kill an XDebug session within your IDE.

Solution 3:

I had a weird issue with this myself.

I am using CentOS 5.5x64, PHP 5.2.10-1. A clean ANSI file in the root with nothing other than session_start() was hanging. The session was being written to disk and no errors were being thrown. It just hung.

I tried everything suggested by Thariama, and checked PHP compile settings etc.

My Fix:

yum reinstall php;  /etc/init.d/httpd restart

Hope this helps someone.

To everyone complaining about the 30 seconds of downtime being unacceptable, this was an inexplicable issue on a brand new, clean OS install, NOT a running production machine. This solution should NOT be used in a production environment.

Solution 4:

Ok I face the same problem on 2 PC, 1 is MAC mini XAMPP, 1 is Windows 10 Xampp. Both is php spent infinity to run session_start(). Both PHP version is 7.x.x

I found that session files is lock to read and write. So that I added code to make PHP read session files and immediately unlock when done with

<?php
session_start([
    'read_and_close' => true,
]);
?>

or

<?php
//For PHP 5.x
session_start();

session_write_close();
?>

After this PHP unlock session file => Problems solve

Solution 5:

The problem: -

Iv experienced (and fixed) the problem where file based sessions hang the request, and database based sessions get out of sync by storing out of date session data (like storing each session save in the wrong order).

This is caused by any subsequent request that loads a session (simultaneous requests), like ajax, video embed where the video file is delivered via php script, dynamic resource file (like script or css) delivered via php script, etc.

In file based sessions file locking prevents session writing thus causing a deadlock between the simultaneous request threads.

In database based session the last request thread to complete becomes the most recent save, so for example a video delivery script will complete long after the page request and overwrite the since updated session with old session data.

The fix: -

If your ajax or resource delivery script doesnt need to use sessions then easiest to just remove session usage from it.

Otherwise you'd best make yourself a coffee and do the following: -

  1. Write or employ a session handler (if not already doing so) as per http://www.php.net//manual/en/class.sessionhandler.php (many other examples available via google search).
  2. In your session handler function write() prepend the code ...

        // processes may declare their session as read only ...
        if(!empty($_SESSION['no_session_write'])) {
                unset($_SESSION['no_session_write']);
                return true;
        }
    
  3. In your ajax or resource delivery php script add the code (after the session is started) ...

        $_SESSION['no_session_write'] = true;
    

I realise this seems like a lot of stuffing around for what should be a tiny fix, but unfortunately if you need to have simultaneous requests each loading a session then it is required.

NOTE if your ajax or resource delivery script does actually need to write/save data, then you need to do it somewhere other than in the session, like database.