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how to set header no cache in spring mvc 3 by annotation? not is

  response.setHeader("Pragma","No-cache");     
  response.setHeader("Cache-Control","no-cache");     
  response.setDateHeader("Expires",   0);     
2
  • 4
    Good question, although I suspect there's no way to do this with annotations (yet)
    – skaffman
    Dec 6, 2010 at 9:03
  • why you choose not use setting response header directly but using interceptors, which I think is not performance friendly?
    – hakunami
    Sep 15, 2015 at 6:13

3 Answers 3

48

There is no such option. You can use an interceptor:

<mvc:annotation-driven/>
<mvc:interceptors>
    <bean id="webContentInterceptor" 
          class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.WebContentInterceptor">
        <property name="cacheSeconds" value="0"/>
        <property name="useExpiresHeader" value="true"/>
        <property name="useCacheControlHeader" value="true"/>
        <property name="useCacheControlNoStore" value="true"/>
    </bean>
</mvc:interceptors>

(taken from here)

On one hand it is logical not to have such annotation. Annotations on spring-mvc methods are primarily to let the container decide which method to invoke (limiting it by a request header, request url, or method). Controlling the response does not fall into this category.

On the other hand - yes, it will be handy to have these, because when controllers are unit-tested it is not relevant to test http header stuff (or is it?). And there are @ResponseBody and @ResponseStatus, which do specify some response properties.

3
  • 2
    ah, yes. Well, perhaps my reasoning is not entirely correct :)
    – Bozho
    Dec 6, 2010 at 9:06
  • 1
    Just to comment this still works with Spring webmvc 4. Such a helpful, simple solution.
    – D2TheC
    Jan 29, 2015 at 7:40
  • 1
    In Spring 4.2 you have to use setCacheSeconds(0) and setCacheControl(CacheControl.noStore())
    – Rod Lima
    Oct 27, 2015 at 14:19
19

To override the settings for certain controller mappings use the cacheMappings properties object on the WebContentInterceptor

<bean id="webContentInterceptor"
class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.WebContentInterceptor">
<property name="cacheSeconds" value="2100" />
<property name="useExpiresHeader" value="true" />
<property name="useCacheControlHeader" value="true" />
<property name="useCacheControlNoStore" value="true" />
<property name="cacheMappings">
    <props>
        <prop key="/myUncachedController">0</prop>
    </props>
</property>

1

I know this is old but this might be helpful to some.

If you wanted to add a lot more logic to when you cache and when you don't you can also write a custom interceptor.

For example if you wanted to disable caching in the response only when the browser is IE or only from specific urls you can do that as well by extending the HandlerInterceptor interface.

By doing that you can have a lot of control over exactly what happens. It's not as easy as just setting the header for everything at once or just typing in the changes to the response in each controller but it is also not that hard and is a better long term solution in my opinion. It is also a good thing to know how to do in spring generally.

This is a pretty good tutorial for it:

http://www.mkyong.com/spring-mvc/spring-mvc-handler-interceptors-example/

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