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HTTP State Management With Cookies (The Java™ Tutorials > Custom Networking > Working With Cookies)
Trail: Custom Networking
Lesson: Working With Cookies
HTTP State Management With Cookies
Home Page > Custom Networking > Working With Cookies
HTTP State Management With Cookies
The HTTP state management mechanism specifies a way to create a stateful session with HTTP requests and responses.

Generally, HTTP request/response pairs are independent of each other. However, the state management mechanism enables clients and servers that can exchange state information to put these pairs in a larger context, which is called a session. The state information used to create and maintain the session is called a cookie.

A cookie is a piece of data that can be stored in a browser's cache. If you visit a web site and then revisit it, the cookie data can be used to identify you as a return visitor. Cookies enable state information, such as an online shopping cart, to be remembered. A cookie can be short term, holding data for a single web session, that is, until you close the browser, or a cookie can be longer term, holding data for a week or a year.

For more information about HTTP state management, see RFC 2965: HTTP State Management Mechanism.

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