title: Sessions summary: A set of static methods for manipulating PHP sessions. # Sessions Session support in PHP consists of a way to preserve certain data across subsequent accesses such as logged in user information and security tokens. In order to support things like testing, the session is associated with a particular Controller. In normal usage, this is loaded from and saved to the regular PHP session, but for things like static-page-generation and unit-testing, you can create multiple Controllers, each with their own session. ## set :::php Session::set('MyValue', 6); Saves the value of to session data. You can also save arrays or serialized objects in session (but note there may be size restrictions as to how much you can save). :::php // saves an array Session::set('MyArrayOfValues', array('1','2','3')); // saves an object (you'll have to unserialize it back) $object = new Object(); Session::set('MyObject', serialize($object)); ## get Once you have saved a value to the Session you can access it by using the `get` function. Like the `set` function you can use this anywhere in your PHP files. :::php echo Session::get('MyValue'); // returns 6 $data = Session::get('MyArrayOfValues'); // $data = array(1,2,3) $object = unserialize(Session::get('MyObject', $object)); // $object = Object() ## get_all You can also get all the values in the session at once. This is useful for debugging. :::php Session::get_all(); // returns an array of all the session values. ## clear Once you have accessed a value from the Session it doesn't automatically wipe the value from the Session, you have to specifically remove it. :::php Session::clear('MyValue'); Or you can clear every single value in the session at once. Note SilverStripe stores some of its own session data including form and page comment information. None of this is vital but `clear_all` will clear everything. :::php Session::clear_all(); ## API Documentation * [api:Session]