functions, session can be saved to disk or put into a database using the
L<d2i_SSL_SESSION(3)> interface.
-The new_session_cb() is called, whenever a new session has been negotiated
-and session caching is enabled (see
-L<SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3)>).
-The new_session_cb() is passed the B<ssl> connection and the ssl session
-B<sess>. If the callback returns B<0>, the session will be immediately
-removed again. Note that in TLSv1.3, sessions are established after the main
+The new_session_cb() is called whenever a new session has been negotiated and
+session caching is enabled (see L<SSL_CTX_set_session_cache_mode(3)>). The
+new_session_cb() is passed the B<ssl> connection and the ssl session B<sess>.
+Since sessions are reference-counted objects, the reference count on the
+session is incremented before the callback, on behalf of the application. If
+the callback returns B<0>, the session will be immediately removed from the
+internal cache and the reference count released. If the callback returns B<1>,
+the application retains the reference (for an entry in the
+application-maintained "external session cache"), and is responsible for
+calling SSL_SESSION_free() when the session reference is no longer in use.
+
+Note that in TLSv1.3, sessions are established after the main
handshake has completed. The server decides when to send the client the session
information and this may occur some time after the end of the handshake (or not
at all). This means that applications should expect the new_session_cb()