vote up 3 vote down star

Ubuntu -> Apache -> Phusion Passenger -> Rails 2.3

The main part of my site reacts to your clicks. So, if you click on a link, it will send you on to the destination, and instantly regenerate your page.

But, if you hit the back button, you don't see the new page. Unfortunately, it's not showing up without a manual refresh; it appears the browser is caching it. I want to make sure the browser does not cache the page.

Separately, I do want to set far-future expiration dates for all my static assets.

What's the best way to solve this? Should I solve this in Rails? Apache? Javascript?

Thanks for all your help, Jason

flag

4 Answers

vote up 3 vote down

Unfortunately, you cannot guarantee that a browser will not cache a page. It's simply not possible.

However, you can tell browsers that implement caching standards not to cache a page. You do this with http headers like:

Pragma: no-cache

and

Cache-Control: no-cache

So in rails, you would use:

response.headers["Pragma"] = "no-cache"
response.headers["Cache-Control"] = "no-cache"

I recommend you include both, just in case. Either should work for most browsers.

link|flag
Thanks. I'll try this today. – Jason Butler Apr 3 at 9:54
let me know how it goes – Randolpho Apr 3 at 13:42
vote up 1 vote down

I have used this line with some success in the controller. It works in Safari and Internet Explorer but I haven't seen it work with Firefox.

response.headers["Expires"] = "#{1.year.ago}"

For your second point, if you use the the rails helper methods like

stylesheet_link_tag

and leave the default settings on your webserver, the assets are typically cached pretty well.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down check

Finally figured this out - http://blog.serendeputy.com/posts/how-to-prevent-browsers-from-caching-a-page-in-rails/

..in application_controller.rb..

  before_filter :set_cache_buster

  def set_cache_buster
    response.headers["Cache-Control"] = "no-cache, no-store, max-age=0, must-revalidate"
    response.headers["Pragma"] = "no-cache"
    response.headers["Expires"] = "Fri, 01 Jan 1990 00:00:00 GMT"
  end
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Alas. Neither of these suggestions forced the behavior I'm looking for.

Maybe there's a javascript answer? I could have rails write out a timestamp in a comment, then have the javascript check to see if the times are within five seconds (or whatever works). If yes, then fine, but if no, then reload the page?

Do you think this would work?

Thanks for all your help,

Jason

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.