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Per Yahoo's best practices for high performance web sites, I'd like to remove Etags from my headers (I'm manually managing all my caching and have no need for Etags... and when/if I need to scale to a farm, I'd really like them gone). I'm running IIS7 on Windows Server 2008. Anyone know how I can do this?

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7 Answers

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If you only serve content from one server, then leave the Etags there, they won't hurt. Instead, configure the YSlow profile to not count for them when assessing the performance. See the Edit button near the Rulesets select element in the YSlow tab. Then uncheck the option regarding ETags from the YSlow(V2) profile.

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I've run into this problem too, but this article seems to solve my ETag issue. Jeff, does this help?

http://support.microsoft.com/?id=922733

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You would think doing this in the web.config would work to disable ETags in IIS7

<httpProtocol>
    <customHeaders>
    	<remove name="ETag" />
    </customHeaders>
</httpProtocol>

But, sadly, sniffer trace confirms that it does not...

Nor does setting the ETag to blank quotes as other sites have suggested. That doesn't work either:

<httpProtocol>
    <customHeaders>
    	<add name="ETag" value="&quot;&quot;" />
    </customHeaders>
</httpProtocol>

That just causes this to be sent down

ETag: "8ee1ce1acf18ca1:0",""

Which is, er.. not what I had in mind.

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I've not confirmed this Jeff, but could this be because the httpProtocol section is locked at the website level. I found this the case when i was trying to programattically set the iis7 compression level via the web.config file. I had to finally unlock that section on the root server level. Maybe this section has the same problem? (I really wish ALL IIS settings are available via the GUI .. so this stuff is easy to manage and solve) ... <-- ZOMG .. a War-n-Peace comment reply. soz. – Pure.Krome Aug 25 at 7:51
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In IIS 7 you shouldn't have to worry about etags anymore as the IIS configuration number is always set to 0.

There is still a problem if you have IIS6 & IIS7 webservers in the same farm. In this case you would have to manually set the IIS6 config number to 0 as described in this article.

Etags are actually very useful as you don't need to change the filename like stack overflow does (i.e. default.css?1234). If you change the default.css file it will change the etag and therefore subsequent requests will get the file from the server and not the cache.

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far-forward expiration dates make ETags irrelevant, since the browser will literally never request the file again until the specified date (or until the filename changes, of course.) Thus, the need to remove it -- it's obsolete in that scenario. – Jeff Atwood Aug 9 at 9:00
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We had this problem, and even setting a blank custom ETag header in IIS 7 was not working for all files (for example image files). We ended up creating an HttpModule that explicitly removes the ETag header.

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Under IIS7 the Etag change number (the part of the Etag following : ) is always set to 0.

Hence the Etag from the server no longer varies from server to server for the same file and therefore the Yahoo best practice no longer really applies.

Since you can't actually suppress the ETag header on IIS7 it would probably be best that you don't fiddle with it at all. I've found by far the most useful configuration rule is "If the default doesn't break something, leave it alone".

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http://www.jesscoburn.com/archives/2008/10/02/quickly-configure-or-disable-etags-in-iis7-or-iis6/ has a nice pictorial guide.

Essentially, you create a custom response header named ETag and make its value empty.

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I found this solution doesn't work for image files. – jwanagel Feb 5 at 19:18
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doesn't work, sadly – Jeff Atwood Aug 9 at 9:07
On IIS6, this only worked for me when I set no value not just two double quotes. i.e. <httpProtocol> <customHeaders> <add name="ETag" value="" /> </customHeaders></httpProtocol> – Duncan Aug 10 at 22:27

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