I have cacheable dynamic content made in PHP 5.1.0+. I already send the correct headers (including Last-Modified and ETag) to clients.

I now want my script to be able to answer $_SERVER['HTTP_IF_MODIFIED_SINCE'] and $_SERVER['HTTP_IF_NONE_MATCH'] when present. When the conditions matches, I want to answer a HTTP 304 "Not Modified" to clients.

What are the correct conditions? When exactly I issue a 304 instead of the whole content?

The accepted answer in question http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4506/http-how-to-know-when-to-send-a-304-not-modified-response seems to issue this correctly but I have hard times to port that code to PHP 5.

Thank you!

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6 Answers

up vote 11 down vote accepted

I've always used:

function caching_headers ($file, $timestamp) {
    $gmt_mtime = gmdate('r', $timestamp);
    header('ETag: "'.md5($timestamp.$file).'"');

    if(isset($_SERVER['HTTP_IF_MODIFIED_SINCE']) || isset($_SERVER['HTTP_IF_NONE_MATCH'])) {
        if ($_SERVER['HTTP_IF_MODIFIED_SINCE'] == $gmt_mtime || str_replace('"', '', stripslashes($_SERVER['HTTP_IF_NONE_MATCH'])) == md5($timestamp.$file)) {
            header('HTTP/1.1 304 Not Modified');
            exit();
        }
    }

    header('Last-Modified: '.$gmt_mtime);
    header('Cache-Control: public');
}

Don't remember whether I wrote it or got it from somewhere else...

I'm normally using it at the top of a file in this way:

caching_headers ($_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME'], filemtime($_SERVER['SCRIPT_FILENAME']));
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Great function! Really! It saved my day! – Industrial Jan 29 '10 at 23:40
1  
Nice function Rich! A little more legible: caching_headers (__FILE__, filemtime(__FILE__));. – Julian Feb 1 at 18:20
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Really helpful! Tried this but performing multiple requests give out alternatively a 200 and 304. Moving the "Last-Modified" and "Cache-Control" after the "ETag" definition fixes it. – Jami Apr 6 at 1:10
how exactly? Not sure what you mean regarding changing code... – Rich Bradshaw Apr 6 at 9:51
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The answer you're referencing seems to contain all you need. To summarize:

  • generate your own ETag and Last-Modified headers, just as if you would be sending the whole body
  • look at the If-Modified-Since header the client sent, if your own last-modified is older or the same send the 304
  • look at the If-None-Match header of the client, if it matches your own ETag send the 304
  • if you reach this place, the headers did not match, send complete body and new ETag/Last-Modified headers
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Here is a snippet of my render_file() function.

$last_modified = filemtime($filename);
if ($last_modified === false) {
  throw new Exception('Modify date unknown');
}
if (array_key_exists('HTTP_IF_MODIFIED_SINCE', $_SERVER)) {
  $if_modified_since = strtotime(preg_replace('/;.*$/', '', $_SERVER['HTTP_IF_MODIFIED_SINCE']));
  if ($if_modified_since >= $last_modified) { // Is the Cached version the most recent?
    header($_SERVER['SERVER_PROTOCOL'].' 304 Not Modified');
    exit();
  }
}
header('Last-Modified: '.date('r', $last_modified)); // tz should be GMT according to specs but also works with other tzs

// other headers and contents go here  
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And what about HTTP_IF_NONE_MATCH? Where whould it be fitted in your snippet? – AlexV Jan 4 '10 at 19:38
1  
The modification-date was validation enough for me, calculating a Etag (checksum for the contents md5/sha1) generates some server-overhead. However, etags are less errorprone. If content correctness is important check the IF_NONE_MATCH first. If the IF_NONE_MATCH isn't set, then check the IF_MODIFIED_SINCE. Dont check the IF_MODIFIED_SINCE if the etag doesnt match. Because you know the browser cache is invalid! Just send the 304 header and exit() – Bob Fanger Jan 4 '10 at 20:44
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If the client has performed a conditional GET request and access is allowed, but the document has not been modified, the server SHOULD respond with this status code. The 304 response MUST NOT contain a message-body, and thus is always terminated by the first empty line after the header fields.

From - http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html#sec10.3.5

So, if you send a 304 don't send the body.

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I know that and my question is not about this... My question is about WHEN do I send a 304... – AlexV Jan 4 '10 at 19:00
Do you mean, at what point in the php script? – user151841 Jan 4 '10 at 19:03
Ah sorry, gotta slow down, = ] – Mr-sk Jan 4 '10 at 19:10
I mean in which cases I send a 304. Example of answer I seek: "Send 304 when HTTP_IF_MODIFIED_SINCE present and match your last modified date AND when HTTP_IF_NONE_MATCH is present and match your ETags". – AlexV Jan 4 '10 at 19:11
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This article will answer all your questions on caching

I found that adding

RewriteRule .* - [E=HTTP_IF_MODIFIED_SINCE:%{HTTP:If-Modified-Since}]
RewriteRule .* - [E=HTTP_IF_NONE_MATCH:%{HTTP:If-None-Match}]

To the bottom of my htaccess file (below all rewriterule) worked.

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Why?

Having done a lot of research on the subject I found that conditional requests actually slow down a site. There are certain scenarios where that is not the case, but mapping to general usage patterns overall it results in lower throughput and less effective caching.

C.

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Why would it slow down a site. I can't even imagine how it would slow it down (it you send proper cache headers)... – AlexV Jan 6 '10 at 18:40
The short answer to that question is about 5 pages of text and graphs. I keep meaning to put it on the internet somewhere.....watch this space. – symcbean Jan 7 '10 at 13:17
Would be interesting to see that :) – AlexV Jan 7 '10 at 14:25
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