5

I am having a lot of trouble clearing the WebView cache in my UWP app.

If I edit the content of a JS file linked from my HTML page, I can't get the change into my app unless I re-install the app.

The static WebView.ClearTemporaryWebDataAsync() method doesn't seem to work.

I have also tried adding headers to the request to disable caching:

private void reloadPage()
{
    string url = getUrl();
    HttpRequestMessage request = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get, new Uri(url));
    request.Headers.Add("Cache-Control", "no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate");
    request.Headers.Add("Pragma", "no-cache");
    myWebView.NavigateWithHttpRequestMessage(request);
}

I also tried the following, on a punt (I'm not sure if this affects the WebView's caching behaviour), but still no joy:

private void onWebviewLoaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    Windows.Web.Http.Filters.HttpBaseProtocolFilter myFilter = new Windows.Web.Http.Filters.HttpBaseProtocolFilter();
    myFilter.CacheControl.WriteBehavior = Windows.Web.Http.Filters.HttpCacheWriteBehavior.NoCache;
    myFilter.CacheControl.ReadBehavior = Windows.Web.Http.Filters.HttpCacheReadBehavior.Default;

    WebView.ClearTemporaryWebDataAsync().AsTask().Wait();
    reloadPage();
}

Any help would be very much appreciated!

EDIT (14/12/15): I have found that adding headers to the request (as in the first code example above) does work, but only if this has been in place for the lifetime of the app, since install. Which makes sense, as it's just saying not to cache this particular request - it could still use an old cached version.

This works as a cludge for now, but it would be much nicer to be able to make use of caching (e.g. for the duration of an app session), then later clear the cache (e.g. on next startup).

EDIT (14/07/16): The above approach doesn't seem to bear out. Caching behaviour seems to be erratic in the webview...

On a clean install of the app, I can see changes to CSS/JS files with absolutely NO code to clear/disable cache. Then at some seemingly arbitrary point, files seem to be cached, and I cannot clear them from the cache.

4 Answers 4

3

This finally works for me:

await WebView.ClearTemporaryWebDataAsync();
        Windows.Web.Http.Filters.HttpBaseProtocolFilter myFilter = new Windows.Web.Http.Filters.HttpBaseProtocolFilter();
        var cookieManager = myFilter.CookieManager;

        HttpCookieCollection myCookieJar = cookieManager.GetCookies(new Uri("http://www.msftncsi.com/ncsi.txt"));
        foreach (HttpCookie cookie in myCookieJar)
        {
            cookieManager.DeleteCookie(cookie);
        }
1
  • Thanks, But unfortunately it's not cookies I need to clear, but cached css/JS files.
    – Jasongiss
    Sep 26, 2016 at 19:55
1

I don't know if it helps but try to add a timestamp behind the url (url + "?=" + sometimestamphere)

4
  • Thanks very much, Drast. But this doesn't work for me either. I think the timestamped URL parameters would need to be on the links to the JS files inside the page.
    – Jasongiss
    Oct 28, 2015 at 13:02
  • 1
    You can do that as well: stackoverflow.com/questions/11467873/… Oct 29, 2015 at 14:46
  • Thank you, Tamas. Unfortunately, I don't think this will work for me either - I don't want to alter the source of the HTML file on the server, and affect everyone just to fix an issue with UWP apps. But, this is good to know, as a fallback, if I can't find a solution from within the UWP app.
    – Jasongiss
    Nov 3, 2015 at 11:12
  • If you control the HTTP server, add Cache-Control: no-cache to the JavaScript file responses.
    – kiewic
    Nov 3, 2015 at 15:44
0

Refreshing the webview seems to do a reload:

mainWebView.Refresh();

It's definitely a hack, but you may be able to insert at that some point in your application lifecycle to force reloading your content. Perhaps after the "mainWebView_NavigationCompleted()" event?

0

I had a similar problem with css in an UWP app not getting cleared. I ran ProcessMon and found that the UWP app was caching .css and .js files in Windows 10 at: C:\Users\\AppData\Local\Packages\microsoft.windows.authhost.sso.p_8wekyb3d8bbwe\AC\INetCache\Q8IHZDMV. I'm using the Web Authentication Broker so the scenario might be slightly different. If a location similar to this doesn't pan-out, you might want to try to run processmon (part of the SysInternals suite) when you start-up your UWP app to see if you can identify the path the UWP app is using for caching these assets. Once there, deleting these assets and restarting the app did the trick.

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