I have a web site that is recieving many unexpected requests for static resources (images, css files etc) that I would expect to be being served straight from the browser's cache. This is a performance problem and I can't understand why it is happening.
For each static resource the web site returns an Expires
header of 24 hours in the future, a Last-Modified
header of the date of modification of the image/css file and an ETag
:
Expires: Wed, 07 Dec 2011 13:50:47 GMT
Last-Modified: Thu, 14 Jul 2011 15:19:16 GMT
ETag: W/"4875-1310656756000"
With these settings I'd expect that, after the first time the browser requests an image or css file:
- it would not re-request the resource for another 24 hours
- after 24 hours it would re-request the resource, passing an
If-Modified-Since
header and anIf-None-Match
header, to which the server would respond with a304
status (assuming nothing has changed server-side).
This is what happens most of the time.
However I see some browser sessions where the static resources don't appear to be cached and are requested for every page.
Looking at these requests I don't see any If-Modified-Since
or If-None-Match
headers being received. The server is then responding with a 200
status each time, and returning the requested resource. This is a performance problem that I want to track down.
I suspect that the problem is due to the presence of an HTTP proxy/cache between browser and web site (problem sessions usually come from behind corporate firewalls). If so, I don't understand why a Proxy would be interferring with the Expires
/Etag
/Last-Modified
headers in this way.
A couple of pieces of additional info in case they are relevant:
- I don't currently set a
Date
header. Is that needed for theExpires
/Last-Modified
headers to work correctly? - I don't currently set a
Cache-Control
header, having thought thatExpires
/Last-Modified
would be "good enough". - The web site is deployed over both https and http, and I've seen the issue in both deployments. I'd thought that this would stop a proxy being the cause, but now understand that some proxies do intercept SSL traffic.
Has anyone else experienced anything similar and found out why it happens?