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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T15:26:11+00:00 2026-05-10T15:26:11+00:00

Tomcat (version 5 here) stores session information in memory. When clustering this information is

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Tomcat (version 5 here) stores session information in memory. When clustering this information is periodically broadcast to other servers in the cluster to keep things in sync. You can use a database store to make sessions persistant but this information is only written periodically as well and is only really used for failure-recovery rather than actually replacing the in-memory sessions.

If you don’t want to use sticky sessions (our configuration doesn’t allow it unfortunately) this raises the problem of the sessions getting out of sync.

In other languages, web frameworks tend to allow you to use a database as the primary session store. Whilst this introduces a potential scaling issue it does make session management very straightforward. I’m wondering if there’s a way to get tomcat to use a database for sessions in this way (technically this would also remove the need for any clustering configuration in the tomcat server.xml).

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  1. 2026-05-10T15:26:11+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 3:26 pm

    There definitely is a way. Though I’d strongly vote for sticky sessions – saves so much load for your servers/database (unless something fails)…

    http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-5.5-doc/config/manager.html has information about SessionManager configuration and setup for Tomcat. Depending on your exact requirements you might have to implement your own session manager, but this starting point should provide some help.

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