146

During development I have to "clear cache" in Firefox all the time in order to make it use the latest version of JavaScript files.

Is there some kind of setting (about:config) to turn off caching completely for JavaScript files? Or, if not, for all files?

17 Answers 17

232

Enter "about:config" into the Firefox address bar and set:

browser.cache.disk.enable = false
browser.cache.memory.enable = false

If developing locally, or using HTML5's new manifest attribute you may have to also set the following in about:config -

browser.cache.offline.enable = false
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  • 2
    network.http.use-cache is not there for me. Changing browser.cache.offline.enable does not make a difference for me.
    – Curtis
    Feb 17, 2016 at 0:49
  • 1
    I don't doubt this is a good answer, but it no longer seems to be true in the latest firefox builds (I'm using developer edition 47.0a2 at the moment). Disabling caching in the web developer settings is effective for me though. Apr 6, 2016 at 2:13
62

The Web Developer Toolbar has an option to disable caching which makes it very easy to turn it on and off when you need it.

5
  • 1
    CTRL-F5 or holding down the shift key while clicking the Reload button is what I have done in the past, but the Web Developer Toolbar's "Disable Cache" feature is a great way to do that. You don't have to entirely disable firefox's cache that way. Jan 11, 2010 at 17:53
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    You should remember enabling the cache after testing, though. ;)
    – neurolabs
    Jan 1, 2011 at 16:30
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    @Shanimal, It works for me in 14.0.1, you may want to uninstall/resinstall or something.
    – Lucas
    Aug 17, 2012 at 17:01
  • @Lucas doh! The items on the server I was working with were caching, but I forgot to delete my comment... Thanks.
    – Shanimal
    Aug 24, 2012 at 18:03
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    This doesn't work anymore until chrispederick fixes a few new firefox changes in the latest version. I'd go with the about:config solution which is better for developers.
    – akahunahi
    Sep 10, 2013 at 22:39
12

Have you tried to use CTRL-F5 to update the page?

4
  • 6
    I really have doubts that this works reliably, at least in the presence of iframes and framesets.
    – Thilo
    Nov 14, 2008 at 10:59
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    correct, it won't always reload the JS/CSS in an iframe, but in Firefox you can at least pop that frame out into a new tab, and reload there.
    – scunliffe
    Nov 14, 2008 at 11:05
  • I always used Ctrl-F5....then I found that it wouldn't load my newest versions of js files I was working in :( Was in an iframe, as well (I know, iframes are the devil, not my choice).
    – Gromer
    Dec 6, 2011 at 16:35
  • Ctrl-F5 does not reset the caching of javascript files. what it does (mostly) is to clear your session and cookies, but not the cached javascript and stylesheets
    – AceMark
    Sep 11, 2012 at 0:52
10

There is no specific option to disable caching only for JavaScript, you will have to disable caching entirely.

FireBug has an option to disable the browser cache on the Network tab's drop down menu.

10

Firefox 48 Developer Tools

Allows you to turn off cache only when toolbox is open, which is perfect for web development:

  • F12
  • gearbox on right upper corner
  • scroll down top Advanced settings
  • check "Disable Cache (when toolbox is open)"

enter image description here

https://stackoverflow.com/a/27397425/895245 has similar content, but positioning changed a bit since.

1
  • 1
    Thanks... there's info out there (and in this thread) about setting network.http.use-cache to false... but in my version of FF (53) that setting no longer exists... This technique is far superior anyway. Jun 20, 2017 at 15:00
8

On the same page you want to disable the caching do this : FYI: the version am working on is 30.0

You can :

open webdeveloper toolbar open web developer

and pick disable cache

After that it will reload page from its own (you are on) and every thing is recached and any furthure request are recahed every time too and you may keep the web developer open always to keep an eye and make sure its always on (check).

7

If you're working with server side code you could generate a random number and append it to the end of the src in the following manner....

src="yourJavascriptFile.js?randomNumber=434534"

with the randomNumber being randomly generated each time.

1
  • This is the only solution that has worked for me besides clearing browser cache manually every time I refresh.
    – Curtis
    Feb 17, 2016 at 0:50
4

I know I'm resurrecting an ancient question, but I was trying to solve this problem today and have an alternate solution. Toggling caching when I want to test was not really acceptable for me, and as others mentioned, hard refreshing (ctrl+shift+r) doesn't always work.

Instead, I opted to put the following in my vhost.conf file (can also be done in .htaccess) on my dev environment:

<FilesMatch "\.(js|css)$">
FileETag None
<IfModule mod_headers.c>
Header unset ETag
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=0, no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate"
Header set Pragma "no-cache"
Header set Expires "Wed, 11 Jan 1984 05:00:00 GMT"
</IfModule>
</FilesMatch>

On my dev environment, this ensures that js and css are always retrieved. Additionally it doesn't affect the rest of my browsing, and it also works for all browsers, so testing in chrome / ie etc is also easy.

Found the snippet here, some other handy apache tricks as well: http://www.askapache.com/htaccess/using-http-headers-with-htaccess.html#prevent-caching-with-htaccess

To make sure that my clients always see the latest version on production, we increment the query string on the js include on each update, ie

jquery.somefile.js?v=0.5

This forces my clients' browsers to update their local cache when they see a new querystring, but then caches the new copy until the file is updated again

3

Best strategy is to design your site to build a unique URL to your JS files, that gets reset every time there is a change. That way it caches when there has been no change, but imediately reloads when any change occurs.

You'd need to adjust for your specific environment tools, but if you are using PHP/Apache, here's a great solution for both you, and the end-users.

http://verens.com/archives/2008/04/09/javascript-cache-problem-solved/

3

You can use CTRL-F5 to reload bypassing the cache.

You can set the preferences in firefox not to use the cache

network.http.use-cache = false

You can setup you web server to send a no-cache/Expires/Cache-Control headers for the js files.

Here is an example for apache web server.

0
3

If you use FireBug, on the Network tab's drop down menu there is an option do disable the browser's cache.

enter image description here

1
  • Firebug is discontinued.
    – K7AAY
    Jun 7, 2020 at 23:29
1

There are pros and cons to the last two solutions posted, but they're both IMHO great solutions.

  1. You may or may not want your session ID embedded in your url like that for tighter security. But in development that shouldn't matter, but what if you forget to remove it? Also does that really work? Wouldn't you need something like a sequential number generator (hit count stored in the session, or maybe even just if 1 then 0, if 0 then 1)?

  2. Adding a session id (or whatever sequencer) means you need to remember to add it to every resource you don't want cached. On the one hand that's better because you can just include your session id with just that resource you're actively developing and testing. On the other hand, it means you have to do that and you have to remember to remove that for production.

  3. Modifying the vhost.conf or the .htaccess file does the trick nicely without the need to remember to add and remove the session id. But the downside is performance of all js and css resources will be affected, and if you have large files, that's going to slow you down.

Both seem like great, elegant solutions -- depends on your needs.

1

I use CTRL-SHIFT-DELETE which activates the privacy feature, allowing you to clear your cache, reset cookies, etc, all at once. You can even configure it so that it just DOES it, instead of popping up a dialog box asking you to confirm.

1

In higher versions of Firefox, like Nightly, there is an options named "disable cache", you can find it by clicking the gear. And that options works only in current session, which means when you close inspector and restart it, you have to check it again if you want catch disabled.

1
  • I wish there was a way to disable cache globally. It's very annoying having to check it every time I open the inspector. Oct 29, 2014 at 19:19
0

After 2 hours of browsing for various alternatives, this is something that worked for me.

My requirement was disabling caching of js and css files in my spring secured web application. But at the same time caching these files "within" a particular session.

Passing a unique id with every request is one of the advised approaches.

And this is what I did :- Instead of

<script language="javascript" src="js/home.js"></script>

I used

<script language="javascript" src="js/home.js?id=${pageContext.session.id}"></script>

Any cons to the above approach are welcome. Security Issues ?

0

In firefox 45, disk cache options can be set by changing the value of: browser.cache.disk.enable

The value can be set on the "about:config" page.

On http://kb.mozillazine.org/About:config_entries#Browser I found the following description for "browser.cache.disk.enable":

True (default): Use disk cache, up to capacity specified in browser.cache.disk.capacity False: Disable disk cache (same effect as setting browser.cache.disk.capacity to 0)

0

First of All, this can be easily done, for e.g. by PHP to force the browser to renew files based on cache date (expiration time). If you just need it for experimental needs, then try to use ctrl+shift+del to clear all cache at once inside Firefox browser. The third solution is to use many add-ons that exits for Firefox to clear cache based on time lines.

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