23

As of recent safari 5 was released, and it turns out to cause some problems for my website. I have a dynamic website running classic ASP (though that shouldn't matter much) and the site has some creative use of the history stack. For instance, you can be on a page that lists products, then go to details about a product and change the product (admin-view). When you click save on the product the information is sent to the server via AJAX, and a history.back() is issued. This works great in all browsers (including safari <= 4), however, in the newly released safari 5 it stopped working. It seems that when you click back in safari 5 it doesn't actually refresh the page, it only loads it from cache, which means that the changes made in the details view isn't shown. How can I go about to make this work in safari 5 as well? This is the current code I have to turn off caching (included at the top of every page):

Dim pStr
pStr = "private, no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate"
Response.AddHeader "pragma","no-cache"      '?
Response.AddHeader "cache-control", pStr    '?  Er ikke sikker på om disse 3 siste er nødvendige.
Response.AddHeader "cache-control", "post-check=0, pre-check=0"     '?  Er ikke sikker på om disse 3 siste er nødvendige.
Response.AddHeader "Expires", "Mon, 26 Jul 1997 05:00:00 GMT"       '?
Response.AddHeader "Last-Modified", Now()

3 Answers 3

46

The empty unload handler will not work anymore. Instead you can check the persisted property of the onpageshow event. It is set to false on initial page load. When page is loaded from bfcache it is set to true.

Kludgish solution is to force a reload when page is loaded from bfcache.

window.onpageshow = function(event) {
    if (event.persisted) {
        window.location.reload() 
    }
};

If you are using jQuery then do:

$(window).bind("pageshow", function(event) {
    if (event.originalEvent.persisted) {
        window.location.reload() 
    }
});
10
  • 1
    Great fix - Confirmed to work as of iOS 6 (iPhone and iPad)! Thanks Mika!
    – Jesse
    Apr 7, 2013 at 12:15
  • 2
    This also works on Safari 6, desktop. The old hack of window.onunload no longer works consistently-this should now be considered the 'correct' answer. Jun 6, 2013 at 20:34
  • 1
    This works on iPad. Unfortunately (for me at least), it has the side-effect of reloading the page when awaking from sleep mode. And if the user has done a bunch of changing of form elements resulting in all sorts of display changes, the user has to start over. Is there a way to reload the page only if from a back button, but not if awaking? Oct 16, 2013 at 20:37
  • You could save the state of the form to local storage. There are ready made plugins for that: github.com/shaneriley/jquery_remember_state Oct 16, 2013 at 20:48
  • 1
    Little bug in your jQuery version. Missing a ) before the final semicolon. Nov 12, 2013 at 14:27
7

After some googeling and digging I've found a solution, though I'm not too happy about it. Setting onunload="" in the body-tag causes Safari to invalidate the page and reload it uppon window.history.back();.

1
  • 1
    I've been having a similar issue, except I want the user to be revalidated on browser-back (students taking turns on an iPad). The onunload = "" hack seems to work fine forcing the re-validation on Safari on a laptop, but not on mobile Safari on an iPad. Any thoughts?
    – John
    Aug 9, 2011 at 4:29
3

Here's another way:

    function invalidateBackCache() {
        // necessary for Safari: mobile & desktop
    }

    window.addEventListener("unload", invalidateBackCache, false);

I chose to go this route because adding HTML (onunload="") to the body tag in .Net involved modifying three files in my case. Setting the onunload attribute in jQuery didn't solve it either.

This works for mobile Sarfari (iPad) as well.

3
  • 2
    nope, this didn't work for me either (back button on ipad). it's only working on refresh.
    – sirmak
    Feb 14, 2012 at 7:14
  • 1
    The idea of this is correct / worked for me. I used the following jquery dependent code: $(window).on('unload', function () { });
    – Sam
    Apr 15, 2014 at 23:25
  • note that unload event was reported to be problematic on recent versions on mobile Safari, so you may want to double-check Nov 14, 2016 at 21:32

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