178

I'm having troubles with my meta tags with Open Graph. It seems as though Facebook is caching old values of my meta tags. Old values for Attributes og:title and og:url are still used, even though I have changed them already.

I ran Lint on a page in my site, and this appeared:

Facebook Open Graph lint screenshot

Notice that there are two values for og:title and og:url, and the last one prevailed. However, The last two entries are the OLD entries that I used for this site. I am now currently using these meta tags (you can verify if you view the source of the HTML):

<meta property="og:title" content="Smart og rummelig pusletaske fra Petit Amour med god plads til alt &#8211; værdi 1.099 kr &#8211; køb nu kun 599 kr   "/>
<meta property="og:description" content="Pinq.dk - Det gode liv for det halve"/>
<meta property="og:type" content="product"/>
<meta property="og:url" content="http://pinq.dk/tilbud/landsdaekkende/lissy/"/>
<meta property="og:image" content="http://pinq.dk/wp-content/themes/pinq/images/logo-top.png"/>
<meta property="og:site_name" content="Pinq" />
<meta property="fb:app_id" content="161840830532004" />

Why is Facebook caching og:title and og:url? Is anyone experiencing the same issue?

10
  • I suppose this is like a history? I'm seeing FB getting the latest title and url for you (in the info table) so why bother?
    – ifaour
    Apr 25, 2011 at 8:29
  • The problem is, the facebook Like count is still for the OLD og:url (pinq.dk) which is around 200+, as opposed to counting for pinq.dk/tilbud/landsdaekkende/lissy
    – Ardee Aram
    Apr 25, 2011 at 8:33
  • and I don't think this is history. More of og:url being (supposedly) set twice, the last being the one that prevailed. Somehow, old values that are removed already from the code still affect the meta values.
    – Ardee Aram
    Apr 25, 2011 at 8:35
  • 3
    Well, have a read of this. Especially the Editing Meta Tags section. I'm not sure if it's related but it may help. Will check on this later, sorry mate!
    – ifaour
    Apr 25, 2011 at 8:40
  • 2
    That's probably it. "You can update the attributes of your page by updating your page's <meta> tags. Note that og:title and og:type are only editable initially - after your page receives 50 likes the title becomes fixed, and after your page receives 10,000 likes the type becomes fixed. These properties are fixed to avoid surprising users who have liked the page already. Changing the title or type tags after these limits are reached does nothing, your page retains the original title and type.". Thanks ifaour!
    – Ardee Aram
    Apr 25, 2011 at 8:45

22 Answers 22

310
  1. Go to http://developers.facebook.com/tools/debug
  2. Enter the URL following by fbrefresh=CAN_BE_ANYTHING

Examples:

  1. http://www.example.com?fbrefresh=CAN_BE_ANYTHING
  2. http://www.example.com?postid=1234&fbrefresh=CAN_BE_ANYTHING
  3. OR visit: http://developers.facebook.com/tools/debug/og/object?q=http://www.example.com/?p=3568&fbrefresh=89127348912

I was having the same issue last night, and I got this solution from some website.

Facebook saves your cache thumbnail. It won't refresh even if you delete the thumnail/image from your server. But Facebook allows you to refresh by using fbrefresh.

19
  • 31
    param fbrefresh might not be necessary as the debug tool refreshes the object without it. Mar 25, 2012 at 20:23
  • 7
    It does not clear the cache whatsoever unless you use this parameter. Sep 6, 2012 at 23:41
  • 29
    Untrue, adding that parameter makes no difference to the debug tool's operation - there is no reference to that parameter whatsoever in the debug tool or scraper code
    – Igy
    Sep 21, 2012 at 18:01
  • 7
    There's no need to use the fbrefresh parameter, but you do need to be logged in as an admin for the FB app that owns that domain, otherwise the cache won't be updated. Oct 3, 2012 at 21:51
  • 3
    I can verify that adding the fbrefresh parameter worked for me. If I shared the URL it used old data even though debugger was showing the correct data. But once I used the debugger with fbrefresh parameter then even normal shares used the correct data.
    – ice cream
    Aug 18, 2013 at 13:53
84

The most voted question is quite outdated:

These are the only 2 options that should be used as of November 2014:

For non developers

  1. Use the FB Debugger: https://developers.facebook.com/tools/debug/og/object
  2. Paste the url you want to recache. (Make sure you use the same url included on your og:url tag)
  3. Click the Fetch Scrape information again Button

For Developers

  1. Make a GET call programmatically to this URL: https://graph.facebook.com/?id=[YOUR_URL_HERE]&scrape=true (see: https://developers.facebook.com/docs/games_payments/takingpayments#scraping)
  2. Make sure the og:url tag included on the head on that page matches with the one you are passing.
  3. you can even parse the json response to get the number of shares of that URL.

Additional Info About Updating Images

  • If the og:image URL remains the same but the image has actually changed it won't be updated nor recached by Facebook scrapers even doing the above. (even passing a ?last_update=[TIMESTAMP] at the end of the image url didn't work for me).
  • The only effective workaround for me has been to assign a new name to the image.

Note regarding image or video updates on previously posted posts:

  • When you call the debugger to scrap changes on your og:tags of your page, all previous Facebook shares of that URL will still show the old image/video. There is no way to update all previous posts and it's this way by design for security reasons. Otherwise, someone would be able to pretend that a user shared something that he/she actually didn't.
16
  • It doesn't seem to return the number of shares for my page. I read in this post: "stackoverflow.com/questions/3581488/…" that you need to have a Facebook like/share button on the page in order for the output of this end-point to contain any information.
    – St. Jan
    Feb 17, 2015 at 17:24
  • make sure the tags are in the HEAD and not the BODY of your page - the debugger WILL warn you of this and but they'll be ignored (yes I know you mentioned this I just wanted to stress the point) Aug 10, 2015 at 17:55
  • @Oriol Esteban did you find other ways for updating images?
    – Petr
    Sep 10, 2015 at 12:12
  • 3
    @Oriol When I recently tried this I had to POST post to this URL (as per developers.facebook.com/docs/sharing/opengraph/… )
    – Glen T
    Oct 29, 2015 at 17:23
  • 1
    Any ideas about how to scratch the cache when changing the url of og:video ????? I did a small edit to my video and changed the url, and facebook keeps showing the old version! I obviously did the scratch in debug (an it shows correctly there) but not in the post! ... this is driving me crazy!
    – RayOnAir
    Nov 7, 2015 at 15:12
19

If you have many pages and don't want to refresh them manually - you can do it automatically.

Lets say you have user profile page with photo:

$url = 'http://'.$_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'].'/'.$user_profile;
$user_photo = 'http://'.$_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'].'/'.$user_photo;

<meta property="og:url" content="<?php echo $url; ?>"/>
<meta property="og:image" content="<?php echo $user_photo; ?>"

Just add this to your page:

// with jQuery
$.post(
    'https://graph.facebook.com',
    {
        id: '<?php echo $url; ?>',
        scrape: true
    },
    function(response){
        console.log(response);
    }
);

// with "vanilla" javascript
var fbxhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
fbxhr.open("POST", "https://graph.facebook.com", true);
fbxhr.setRequestHeader("Content-type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded");
fbxhr.send("id=<?php echo $url; ?>&scrape=true");

This will refresh Facebook cache. If you use the jQuery solution, have a look at "response" in console.log - you will find there "updated_time" field and other useful information.

11
  • this was the only consistent solution that would bust the image cache for me. using fbrefresh didn't do anything for my problem.
    – hellatan
    Feb 22, 2014 at 15:39
  • Hi, I'm trying this method but I'm getting some errors, $this->output(' <script type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function(){ $.post( "graph.facebook.com", { id: "'.$this->content['canonical'].'", scrape: true }, function(response){ console.log(response); } ); }); </script> ');
    – monsterboy
    Apr 3, 2014 at 10:10
  • I'm getting the following error Uncaught ReferenceError: $ is not defined (anonymous function) any help would be very appreciated :)
    – monsterboy
    Apr 3, 2014 at 10:11
  • @monsterboy $ - this is a shortcut to jQuery function. $.post() is the same as jQuery.post() To use this library you have to import it first: <script src="code.jquery.com/jquery-latest.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script> Apr 8, 2014 at 13:51
  • @ZhorzhAlexandr thx for ur answer but i m using wordpress and i have one post which could be edited every day so how i could use this script every time before sharing ?
    – Antwan
    Oct 11, 2014 at 10:03
12

The OG thumbnail does not seem to refresh even if passing the fbrefresh variable. To update this without waiting for automated clearing you'll need to change the filename of the thumbnail associated meta tag value and refresh.

5
  • According to the other answers, you can force a refresh using the fbrefresh URL parameter. Dec 12, 2012 at 16:36
  • 1
    @SamMussmann It seems this only (if it even does that) refreshes the cache of the OG tag contents, and NOT the actual image found from the URL of said contents. EG: You keep the OG tags the same, but change the image file (keeping the name the same) and the image itself will stay in cache. I've found no way to clear this apart from, as Seb said, you must change the image filename.
    – Nick M
    Oct 2, 2014 at 4:03
  • @Nick M Did you find any other solutions?
    – Petr
    Sep 10, 2015 at 12:13
  • Solved. I solved it with adding ?t=TIMESTAMP to my image url in php script, where we generate tags. For now it works.
    – Petr
    Sep 10, 2015 at 12:51
  • Just tried renaming image file and updated the meta tag value, not working too. Apr 11, 2016 at 6:25
7

Basically, the answer is patience ;)

I checked the Linter this morning, and og:title and og:url displays correctly, without the redundant values. I guess FaceBook automatically clears its cache at some specific interval. I just have to wait.

enter image description here

1
  • From facebook for developers, The object cache expires every 7 days, and Facebook will automatically rescrape the object when it's next used.
    – Venugopal
    Jul 28, 2016 at 17:08
7

I had the same issues using og:image, several attempts to rename the file or clear FB cache did not work either via the facebook debugger or testing via an actual account.

The new facebook guidelines state the image size should be 1200 x 630 or having that aspect ratio, this seems to be wrong, the only thing that worked for me was using an image with square dimensions.

Edit* Afew hours I went back to use 1200 x 630 and it magically worked, it was magical.

I also renamed the files to f*^*kfacebook.jpg, not sure it helped but it felt good.

0
4

Yes, facebook automatically clears the cache every 24 hours: Actually facebook scrapes the pages and updates the cache every 24 hours https://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/plugins/like/#scraperinfo.

2
4

Ooook, finally it helped (I use IP.Board). What I had to do was:

  1. Change url of og:image on my website (General configuration).
  2. Try this method with ?fbrefresh=1154464gd56

Thanks to author for this thread!

EDIT: What is more you need to remember about image requirements. For now (january 2013) it's: - at least 200 px in both directions - maximum ratio 3:1

4
  1. Visit the FB page https://developers.facebook.com/tools/debug/og/object/
  2. Enter your domain.
  3. Click the button "Fetch new scrape information"
  4. Done
1
  • That page doesn't exist.
    – VanAlbert
    Dec 16, 2022 at 13:36
4

I'm sorry folks but the correct answer is:

There is no fool proof way to update the open graph og:image url with immediate result. It is cached until fb updates (reportedly every 24 hours)

Here are things that have been reported to work by others but I have had ZERO success with any of them.

  • Choosing "Fetch new scrape information"
  • Changing the actual image filename and/or deleting the original
  • Adding a query string to the image url by appending a PHP TIMESTAMP or ?anything
  • Adding the "...yoursite.com/?fbrefresh=anything" query string to the debugger fetch url
  • Choosing the graph API link at the bottom of the og dev page
  • Choosing to see exactly what the scraper sees - does not appear to request real time un-cached scrape data, it still shows the cached image url even if the file no longer exists

Inspecting your code is always a spot on way to confirm it is not an issue with browser cache or some caching service. If the meta information is up to date in your code and you've tried all of the above (unless another suggestion comes to fruition), the correct answer is you can do nothing but wait.

3

We just ran into this, as it turns out, we weren't linting the right url, since the real url had a query string (duh, different page as far as a bot is concerned).

http://example.com/

!==

http://example.com/?utm_campaign=foo

The linter will recache your page, you don't have to wait.

0
3

One thing to add, the url is case sensitive. Note that:

apps.facebook.com/HELLO

is different in the linter's eyes then

apps.facebook.com/hello

Be sure to use the exact site url that was entered in the developer settings for the app. The linter will return the properties otherwise but will not refresh the cache.

1

I've found out that if your image is 72dpi it will give you the image size error. Use 96dpi instead. Hope this helps.

1
  1. Go to http://developers.facebook.com/tools/debug

  2. Paste in the url of the page and click debug. If your site is using url aliases make sure you are using the same url as Facebook is using for the page you are sharing (example: in Drupal use the node/* path instead of the alias if the page is shared via that url).

  3. Click in the "Share preview" part on "See this in the share dialog" link
1
  • Best solution! Thank you
    – MeV
    May 16, 2016 at 12:39
1

Facebook Developer Documents says title property has exception:

Once 50 actions (likes, shares and comments) have been associated with an object, you won't be able to update its title

https://developers.facebook.com/docs/sharing/opengraph/using-objects#update

0

Had a similar experience. Website link was showing a 404 in the preview that facebook generated. Turns out the og:url metadata was wrong. We had already fixed it a few days back but were still seeing a 404 on the preview. We used the tool at https://developers.facebook.com/tools/debug/ and that forced the refresh (didn't have to append any parameters by the way) In our case, Facebook didn't refresh the cache after 24 hours but the tool helped force it.

0

It is a cache, ofc it refreshes, that's what cache is ment to do once in a while. So waiting will eventually work but sometimes you need to do that faster. Changing the filename works.

1
  • So why -1? Literally noone answered the simplest solution to CHANGE THE FILENAME and it actually works not like other (+/- 5) answers voted up which don't or at least they did but are outdated. Ofc if you can't change the filename for some reason, this answer will not help you.
    – Srneczek
    Apr 21, 2015 at 9:03
0

I was having this issue too. The scraper shows the right information, but the share url was still populated with old data.

The way I got around this was to use the feed method, instead of share, and then populate the data manually (which isn't exposed with the share method)

Something like this:

shareToFB = () => {
    window.FB.ui({
    method: 'feed',
    link: `signup.yourdomain.com/?referrer=${this.props.subscriber.sid}`,
    name: 'THIS WILL OVERRIDE OG:TITLE TAG',
    description: 'THIS WILL OVERRIDE OG:DESCRIPTION TAG',
    caption: 'THIS WILL OVERRIDE THE OG:URL TAG'
  });
};
0

Really easy solve. Tested and working. You just need to generate a new url when you update your meta tags. It's as simple as adding a "&cacheBuster=1" to your url. If you change the meta tags, just increment the "&cacheBuster=2"

Orginal URL

www.example.com

URL when og meta tags are updated:

www.example.com?cacheBuster=1

URL when og meta tags are updated again:

www.example.com?cacheBuster=2

Facebook will treat each like a new url and get fresh meta data.

0

Years later and this is still a common problem, but its not always facebook's cache: It is very often human error (allow me to elaborate)

OG:TYPE effects your image scrape:

  1. https://ogp.me/#type_article not the same as https://ogp.me/#type_website

Be aware that og:type=website will cause any /sub-pages/ of that url to become "canonical". This means you will have trouble getting your images to update using the scraper no matter what you do.

Consider this "assumption and common mistake"

-<meta property="og:type" content="website" /> => https://www.example.org (parent)
-<meta property="og:type" content="website" /> => https://www.example.org/sub-page/
-<meta property="og:type" content="website" /> => https://www.example.org/sub-page/child-2/
- Ergo: /sub-page/ and /child-2/ will inherit the og:image of the parent

Those are not "all websites", 1 is a website, the others are articles.

If you do that Facebook will think all of those are canonical and it will put the FIRST og:image into all of them. (try it, you'll see) - if you set the og:url to be your root or parent domain you've told facebook they are all canonical. (there is good reason for that, but its off topic)

Consider this solution (which is what most people "really want")

-<meta property="og:type" content="article" /> => https://www.example.org/sub-page/
-<meta property="og:type" content="article" /> => https://www.example.org/sub-page/child-2/

If you do that now Facebook will give you far far less problems with scraping your NEW images.

In closing, YES the cache busters, random vars, changing urls and suggestions here can work, but they will seem like "intermittent voodoo" if the og:type is not specified correctly.

PS: remember that a CDN or serverside cache will serve to Facebook's scraper even if you "think" you can see the most recent version. (I wont spend any time on this other than to point out it will waste colossal amounts of your time if not double checked.)

0

I had a different, but similar problem with Facebook recently, and found that the scraper/debug page mentioned, simply does not appear to read any page in its entirety. My meta properties for Open Graph were further down in the head section, and the scraper would constantly inform me that the image specification was not correct, and would use a cached version regardless. I moved the Open Graph tags further up in the code, near the very top of the page, and then everything worked perfectly, every time.

0

I had the same problem with fb and twitter caching old meta data, this threw me for a curve as I continued to edit the code but no change. I finally discovered they had caching my first request. Adding a query string to the url worked for twitter but not fb(for me).

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