YSlow does not advise to remove ETags in general but for some environments. When not using ETags then you should use Last-Modified
instead.
ETag
and Last-Modified
are for conditional GET-Requests when re-requesting an already cached and maybe expired resource.
Cache-Control max-age
is for defining how long a cached item is valid for sure without asking again. (When expired by this rule then the browser will make a conditional GET ...)
So in your case:
- Browser is caching the resource for one year. Within that year no request for this resource is done at all. It's directly served from local cache. (uses
Cache-Control
header settings.)
- Browser does conditional Request after one year expired to check if something changed. The server responds with
HTTP 304
and empty body when nothing changed. The browser continues to use its cached item in that case without the need of retransmission. (uses ETag
and/or Last-Modified
header settings)
(The browser may or may not respect your data. For example it is possible that a browser will do a conditional request even when one year has not been expired yet.)
For highly optimized sites the Cache-Control
is far more important, because you set it faaaar future expire headers and simply change the URL for the resource in case it changed. While this prevents the use of conditional Requests it gives you the ability to be extremly aggressive when defining the expires header while being able to serve new versions of the resource immediatly to everybody at the same time. This is because of the new URL it seems to be a new resource in browser's view.
For Java there exists a framework called jawr which makes use of these and other concepts without having negative impact to your site development.