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| The Session package contains all interfaces and exceptions related to managing application |
| sessions, the time-based data contexts in which a Subject interacts with an application. |
| |
| <p>Sessions in JSecurity are completely POJO-based and do not <em>require</em> an application to use |
| Web-based or EJB-based session management infrastructure - the client and/or server technoloy is |
| irrelevent in JSecurity's architecture, allowing session management to be employed in the smallest |
| standalone application to the largest enterprise deployments.</p> |
| |
| <p>This design decision opens up a new world to Java applications - most notably the ability to |
| participate in a session regardless if the client is using HTTP, custom sockets, web services, |
| or whatever. Aside from JSecurity, there is currently no technology in Java today allows this |
| heterogenous client-session capability. Because of this freedom, JSecurity naturally supports |
| Single Sign-On for any application.</p> |
| |
| </body> |
| </html> |