== SqlSessionStore See http://railsexpress.de/blog/articles/2005/12/19/roll-your-own-sql-session-store Only Mysql, Postgres and Oracle are currently supported (others work, but you won't see much performance improvement). == Step 1 If you have generated your sessions table using rake db:sessions:create, go to Step 2 If you're using an old version of sql_session_store, run script/generate sql_session_store DB where DB is mysql, postgresql or oracle Then run rake migrate or rake db:migrate for edge rails. == Step 2 Add the code below after the initializer config section: ActionController::CgiRequest::DEFAULT_SESSION_OPTIONS. update(:database_manager => SqlSessionStore) Finally, depending on your database type, add SqlSessionStore.session_class = MysqlSession or SqlSessionStore.session_class = PostgresqlSession or SqlSessionStore.session_class = OracleSession after the initializer section in environment.rb == Step 3 (optional) If you want to use a database separate from your default one to store your sessions, specify a configuration in your database.yml file (say sessions), and establish the connection on SqlSession in environment.rb: SqlSession.establish_connection :sessions == IMPORTANT NOTES 1. The class name SQLSessionStore has changed to SqlSessionStore to let Rails work its autoload magic. 2. You will need the binary drivers for Mysql or Postgresql. These have been verified to work: * ruby-postgres (0.7.1.2005.12.21) with postgreql 8.1 * ruby-mysql 2.7.1 with Mysql 4.1 * ruby-mysql 2.7.2 with Mysql 5.0