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Google Analytics use some query parameters to identify campaigns and to do cookie control. This is all handled by javascript code. Take a look at the following example:

http://www.example.com/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_ter m=October%2B2008&utm_campaign=promotion

This will set cookies via JavaScript with the right campaign origin. This query parameters can have multiple and sometimes random values. Since they are used as cache hash keys the cache performance is heavily degraded in some scenarios.

I suppose there's a not so hard configuration on cache servers to just ignore all query parameters or specific query parameters. Am I right?

Does anyone know how hard is it in popular web cache solutions, to create ?

I'm not interested in a specific web cache solution. It would be great to hear about the one you use.

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  • Why not just utilize _setAllowAnchor? The anchor isn't sent to the server, so the proxy cache never sees it.
    – Yahel
    Sep 30, 2011 at 20:02
  • For that specific case I've done exactly that. Turns out ignoring query parameters on cache backends is harder than I first expected and sometimes even impossible.
    – Eduardo
    Oct 1, 2011 at 21:22
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    Yeah, that's what I'd expect. Kind of makes me wish Google would follow through on my request to make _setAllowAnchor enabled by default.
    – Yahel
    Oct 1, 2011 at 21:24
  • It has it's downsides as well. Breaks sites that abuse deeplinks. eg: Twitter
    – Eduardo
    Oct 2, 2011 at 14:44

1 Answer 1

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It's not hard, but it is dangerous unless you really know what you're doing, because you'd be changing how somebody else's Web site works behind their back.

E.g., in Squid 2.7, have a look at storeurl_rewrite_program, which allows you to rewrite the URLs that are used for cache lookups, without affecting the URL on the wire.

http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/config/storeurl_rewrite_program/

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