Make use of HTTP cache. Send
EtagandLastModifiedheaders. Recognize304 Not modifiedresponse. This way you can save a lot of bandwidth. Additionally some scripts recognize theLastModifiedheader and return only partial contents (ie. only the two or three newest items instead of all 30 or so).Don’t poll RSS from services that supports RPC Ping. I.e. if you’re receiving RPC Ping from a service, you don’t have to poll the data in the standard interval — do it once a day to check if the RPC Ping still works or not (ping can be disabled, reconfigured, damaged, etc). This way you can fetch RSS only on receiving PING, not every hour or so.
Check the TTL (in RSS) or cache control headers (
Expiresin ATOM), and don’t fetch until resource expires.Try to adapt to frequency of new items in each single RSS feed. If in the past week there were only two updates in particular feed, don’t fetch it more than once a day. AFAIR Google Reader does that.
Lower the rate at night hours or other time when the traffic on your site is low.
At last, do it once a hour. ;)
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