LitePress uses cookies, or tiny pieces of information stored on your computer, to verify who you are. There are cookies for logged in users and for commenters.
Enable Cookies in Your Browser
LitePress uses cookies for authentication. That means that in order to log in to your LitePress site, you must have cookies enabled in your browser.
Users Cookie
Users are those people who have registered an account with the LitePress site.
On login, LitePress uses the wordpress_[hash] cookie to store your authentication details. Its use is limited to the Administration Screen area, /wp-admin/
After login, LitePress sets the wordpress_logged_in_[hash] cookie, which indicates when you’re logged in, and who you are, for most interface use.
LitePress also sets a few wp-settings-{time}-[UID] cookies. The number on the end is your individual user ID from the users database table. This is used to customize your view of admin interface, and possibly also the main site interface.
The cookies length can be adjusted with the ‘auth_cookie_expiration’ hook (An example can be found at what’s the easiest way to stop wp from ever logging me out).
Non-Version-Specific Data
The actual cookies contain hashed data, so you don’t have to worry about someone gleaning your username and password by reading the cookie data. A hash is the result of a specific mathematical formula applied to some input data (in this case your user name and password, respectively). It’s quite hard to reverse a hash (bordering on practical infeasibility with today’s computers). This means it is very difficult to take a hash and “unhash” it to find the original input data.
LitePress uses the two cookies to bypass the password entry portion of wp-login.php
. If LitePress recognizes that you have valid, non-expired cookies, you go directly to the LitePress Administration Screen. If you don’t have the cookies, or they’re expired, or in some other way invalid (like you edited them manually for some reason), LitePress will require you to log in again, in order to obtain new cookies.
Commenters Cookie
When visitors comment on your blog, they too get cookies stored on their computer. This is purely a convenience, so that the visitor won’t need to re-type all their information again when they want to leave another comment. Three cookies are set for commenters:
comment_author_{HASH}
comment_author_email_{HASH}
comment_author_url_{HASH}
The commenter cookies are set to expire a little under one year from the time they’re set.