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by davesims 4773 days ago
Since it's not only used for session cookies, I'd keep it around, on the off chance I ever wanted a signed cookie, like:

  cookies.signed['some-id'] = model.id
Rails will use the secret here too.
1 comments

just curious: when would you need a signed cookie though? i.e. What need does it fulfil that neither the session store nor your database do?
I dunno, good question. Maybe something like this: there's some cases where I'll prefer cookies to session data, esp if it's non-volatile data that I can take or leave, like convenience values for the user on the js side, "last selected item" or the like.

I don't necessarily want that data in my session, or as a user attribute that I have to migrate the DB for. If it's a pkid or something that isn't necessarily sensitive, but I also don't want it to be too easy to get at, I might use a signed cookie.

Now, I've never actually done this... ;p