I'm after a definitive reference to what ASP.NET code is required to disabled browsers from caching the page. There are many ways to affect the HTTP headers and meta tags and I get the impression different settings are required to get different browsers to behave correctly. It would be really great to get a reference bit of code commented to indicate which works for all browsers and which is required for particular browser, including versions.

There is a huge amount of information about this issue there but I have yet to find a good reference that describes the benefits of each method and whether a particular technique has been superseded by a higher level API.

I'm particularly interested in ASP.NET 3.5 SP1 but it would be good to get answers for earlier version as well.

This blog entry Two Important Differences between Firefox and IE Caching describes some HTTP protocol behaviour differences.

The following sample code illustrates the kind of thing I am interested in

public abstract class NoCacheBasePage : System.Web.UI.Page
{
    protected override void OnInit(EventArgs e)
    {
        base.OnInit(e);

        DisableClientCaching();
    }

    private void DisableClientCaching()
    {
        // Do any of these result in META tags e.g. <META HTTP-EQUIV="Expire" CONTENT="-1">
        // HTTP Headers or both?

        // Does this only work for IE?
        Response.Cache.SetCacheability(HttpCacheability.NoCache);

        // Is this required for FireFox? Would be good to do this without magic strings.
        // Won't it overwrite the previous setting
        Response.Headers.Add("Cache-Control", "no-cache, no-store");

        // Why is it necessary to explicitly call SetExpires. Presume it is still better than calling
        // Response.Headers.Add( directly
        Response.Cache.SetExpires(DateTime.UtcNow.AddYears(-1));
    }
}
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71% accept rate
I would attempt to answer if I didn't know how horribly impossible thy task is. Controlling the client's cache is like trying to use 10 foot long chopsticks to rearrange furniture. – Jeff Meatball Yang May 27 '09 at 6:03
A whole lot of answers that cover just a part of the problem would still be very valuable. Please throw in your 2 cents worth. – Martin Hollingsworth May 27 '09 at 6:22
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4 Answers

up vote 24 down vote accepted

This is what we use in ASP.NET:

// Stop Caching in IE
Response.Cache.SetCacheability(System.Web.HttpCacheability.NoCache);

// Stop Caching in Firefox
Response.Cache.SetNoStore();

It stops caching in Firefox and IE, but we haven't tried other browsers. The following response headers are added by these statements:

Cache-Control: no-cache, no-store
Pragma: no-cache
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+1 .. Thanks for your suggestion – Kyaw Thurein Feb 1 '11 at 3:01
2  
+1 This is working for me in Chrome, thanks a lot. I also use Response.Cache.SetAllowResponseInBrowserHistory(true); to avoid history to store an entry for each request of the same page. – daniloquio Mar 6 at 19:11
1  
Apparently someone has discovered that using SetCacheability with NoCache also disables the ASP.NET output cache (server-side cache). They suggest to use the ServerAndNoCache option instead. codeclimber.net.nz/archive/2007/04/01/… – md1337 Mar 7 at 21:22
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For what it's worth, I just had to handle this in my ASP.NET MVC 3 application. Here is the code block I used in the Global.asax file to handle this for all requests.

    protected void Application_BeginRequest()
    {
        //NOTE: Stopping IE from being a caching whore
        HttpContext.Current.Response.Cache.SetAllowResponseInBrowserHistory(false);
        HttpContext.Current.Response.Cache.SetCacheability(HttpCacheability.NoCache);
        HttpContext.Current.Response.Cache.SetNoStore();
        Response.Cache.SetExpires(DateTime.Now);
        Response.Cache.SetValidUntilExpires(true);
    }
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The HttpContext.Current.Response.Cache.SetAllowResponseInBrowserHistory(false) made the difference to prevent caching in bith IE and FireFox – Michael Kniskern Jun 7 '11 at 22:43
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There are two approaches that I know of. The first is to tell the browser not to cache the page. Setting the Response to no cache takes care of that, however as you suspect the browser will often ignore this directive. The other approach is to set the date time of your response to a point in the future. I believe all browsers will correct this to the current time when they add the page to the cache, but it will show the page as newer when the comparison is made. I believe there may be some cases where a comparison is not made. I am not sure of the details and they change with each new browser release. Final note I have had better luck with pages that "refresh" themselves (another response directive). The refresh seems less likely to come from the cache.

Hope that helps.

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I've tried various combinations and had them fail in FireFox. It has been a while so the answer above may work fine or I may have missed something.

What has always worked for me is to add the following to the head of each page, or the template (Master Page in .net).

<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
    window.onbeforeunload = function () {   
        // This function does nothing.  It won't spawn a confirmation dialog   
        // But it will ensure that the page is not cached by the browser.
    }  
</script>

This has disabled all caching in all browsers for me without fail.

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1  
Not sure what this is supposed to do, but it does look like a big fat hack that is bound to fail in the next update of any of these browsers. – md1337 Mar 7 at 21:10
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