10

It is a well known problem that IE caches too much of html, even when giving a Cache-Control: no-cache or Last-Modified header to everypage.

This behaiviour is really troubling when working with querystrings to get dynamic information, as IE considers it to be the same page (i.e.: http://example.com/?id=10) and serves the cached version.

I've solved it adding either a random number or a timestring to the querystring (as others have done) like this http://example.com/?id=10&t=2009-08-06_13:12:56 that I just ignore serverside.

Is there a better option? Is there another, cleaner way to acomplish this? I'm aware that POST isn't cached, but it is semanticaly correct to use GET here.

4
  • What I'm asking: is there any other way of doing this? Aug 5, 2009 at 16:27
  • Your assertion is incorrect, by the way. IE doesn't "cache too much of HTML". See www.fiddler2.com/redir/?id=httpperf for discussion of caching in IE.
    – EricLaw
    Apr 5, 2010 at 21:38
  • 1
    @Eric, IE has some unexpected/inconsistent behavior regarding caching. Apr 5, 2010 at 21:55
  • using the generic $.ajax as suggested in the above post stackoverflow.com/a/1767342/5969842 helped solve the issue without using a random number
    – ravikumar
    Feb 23, 2016 at 17:00

6 Answers 6

11

Assuming you are using jQuery, instead of using $.get or $.getJson, use the more generic $.ajax and explicitly set the cache value to false. The following is an example:

$.ajax({
        url: "/Controller/Action",
        cache: false,
        type: "GET",
        dataType: "json",
        success: function(data, textStatus) {
                         alert("success");
                 }
    });

A little more code required (not much though) than using .getJson or .get but will solve the problem cleanly without appending random numbers.

1
  • i got to find that using GET request in IE we should set the not to cache the html and i set 'cache: false' and that prevented IE from bringing the result from cache..thanks
    – Lucky
    Jul 1, 2013 at 6:53
6

You could also use the current Unix Time in milliseconds to avoid the problem of many requests in one second (it is much less likely to have multiple requests in one millisecond)

var url = "http://whatever.com/stuff?key=value&ie=" + (new Date()).getTime();
2

Using a random number (not timestamp) on the querystring, or actually changing the filename are the two methods recommended. Steve Souders and YAHOO!'s performance group has published a ton of useful information and practices they've discovered and developed while optimizing one of the world's most heavily-visited properties.

2

So, in the end, the only reliable way to do this (thanks to IE6) is using a random, or time bound querystring.

You could use a time bound querystring that only changes every 15 seconds (or any other amount of time), so you'd lower the server hit count, as you'd see locally cached content for those 15 seconds.

If you have a standard compliant browser, you can get away with only using ETags.

3
  • This again will fail if the user comes back to the page using the back button and does a refresh on the page. Were you able to find a sure-shot solution which works in all cases? Thanks. Sep 18, 2009 at 14:02
  • You generate the "random" part of the querystring with javascript clientside like shown on stackoverflow.com/questions/1234246/… That way, it will be different every time the get or post is done. Sep 18, 2009 at 14:18
  • " ...(thanks to IE6) is ..." thanks to IE7 too, I did not test IE8 yet. Jun 8, 2010 at 12:41
0

I have the same problem, but take care, in one second there can be many requests. This is why I use this:

$.getJSON("http://server/example?param=value&dummy=" + Math.random(), ...);
1
  • Well, I don't want the same client hitting my server several timer per second, so I don't mind if the information showed is 1 second old. Of course, the output is plain text for humans. Aug 5, 2009 at 16:18
0

Have you tried adding an ETag header in the response? You might use a random one, or a checksum of the generated page so that the cached version is served when appropriate.

I'm not sure what's the behaviour of IE, but with recent versions it should work.

See also the HTTP RFC section on ETag

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