Afternoon All,
A bit of background - I'm building a custom calendar for a company where jobs can be scheduled and engineers can access it from their mobile to know when and where they're going. They previously used Google calendar but now want something bespoke.
All is fine until somebody loses phone signal and gets a horrible offline page in Chrome and can't access any information. What I'm wanting to do is have it save an offline version of the calendar but also update it when they re-visit it with a better connection - as job times often change.
I've tried saving the page and enabling offline mode in Chrome but the page doesn't update until you manually clear the cache so no good.
I've tried adding some javascript to hard refresh the page in the hope it clears the browser cache but again it doesn't update the page.
<script>location.reload(true);</script>
I read about cache manifests and have tried that too but although it feels like it wants to work it also doesn't update the page until I go to chrome://appcache-internals and remove the file.
CACHE MANIFEST
/calendar.php
/css/style.css
Neither PHP or Javascript headers work either as they either don't update the file on re-visit or simply don't save any files in the first place.
header("Cache-Control: no-cache, must-revalidate");
<meta http-equiv="Cache-Control" content="no-store" />
As far as I can tell there's no way to manually delete a user's website cache and re-download it and once the cache has been saved there's no way to force it to update. If you set it to expire then it's not there to access and you don't know when they will next have a connection to update so I'm going round in circles.
I've been trying for several hours now to find something that works and can't believe it's not a simple thing to do and therefore I'm now throwing myself on the mercy of you fine coders to point me in the right direction before my boss hangs me from the first floor window.
Many Thanks
UPDATE
Using what Clarence said as a starting point I came up with the following code in my appcache file:
CACHE MANIFEST
CACHE:
/css/bootstrap.css
/css/style.css
/calendar.php
NETWORK:
/calendar.php
# UPDATED: 03-04-2018 15:55:57
What this does is caches the calendar.php file BUT if there is a connection then it has another look at those files under the NETWORK heading so I also put it in there. If the appcache files hasn't changed then the browser doesn't bother looking so I've used the following code to write to the file when a job has been altered:
$manifest = file_get_contents(__DIR__ . '/cache.appcache');
$newFile = substr($manifest, 0, (strpos($manifest, '# UPDATED: ') + 11));
$newFile = $newFile . date('d-m-Y H:i:s');
file_put_contents('cache.appcache', $newFile);
Basically just searches the file for "UPDATED" and inserts a new time thus updating the file and requiring a re-check from returning users.
Somebody might point out this isn't the right way to do it but it seems to work from my tests so would like to thank those that contributed.