Magic cookie
In computing, a magic cookie, or just cookie for short, is a token or short packet of data passed between communicating programs. The cookie is often used to identify a particular event or as "handle, transaction ID, or other token of agreement between cooperating programs".
Usage
Cookie data is typically not meaningful to the recipient program. The contents are opaque and not usually interpreted until the recipient passes the cookie data back to the sender or perhaps another program at a later time.In some cases, recipient programs are able to meaningfully compare two cookies for equality.
The cookie can be used like a ticket.
Early use
The term magic cookie appears in the man page for the fseek routine in the C standard library, dating back at least to 1979, where it was stated:- "ftell returns the current value of the offset relative to the beginning of the file associated with the named stream. It is measured in bytes on UNIX; on some other systems it is a magic cookie, and the only foolproof way to obtain an offset for fseek."
Cookie as token
Cookies are used as identifying tokens in many computer applications. When one visits a website, the remote server may leave an HTTP cookie on one's computer, where they are often used to authenticate identity upon returning to the website.
Cookies are a component of the most common authentication method used by the X Window System.