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My deployments were all working fine during development then all of a sudden, without me changing anything Google stopped serving new files and stuck to a version.

I tried deleting all versions except the last one: enter image description here

I tried clearing memcache

It tried versions->diagnose->source to look at the code directly on StackDriver, which could not be simpler: enter image description here

I tried clearing browser cache and opening the url on a different computer

And still loading up the url serves the old content, like if it was cached somewhere.

if I use https://[VERSION].[APPID].appspot.com then it serves the last version. But only using https://[APPID].appspot.com serves the old version from yesterday that is not anywhere anymore.

What happened Google??

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  • Your content is being cached somewhere? Where? One tool is curl Look at the headers for one of your objects. That might give you a clue. curl -i URL. Use the available tools to analyze the problem instead of guessing. Aug 31, 2019 at 23:47
  • Try Chrome, use the debugger. When loading your page, look at the network traffic. Is Chrome actually making a request for new data or is the request cached? Aug 31, 2019 at 23:48
  • Do you get a 307 Internal Redirect when visiting the page? There's a similar thread in Google Issue Tracker that had been solved. To summarize, if this issue is not reproducible in an incognito window, which disables extensions by default, the issue could be caused by a certain extension and would have to disable that extension. I invite you to read through the thread as it goes more in-depth regarding the issue
    – JKleinne
    Sep 1, 2019 at 15:38

1 Answer 1

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The only surefire technique I have found to bust all caching for Google App Engine is to change the base URL for each new version of the app.

app.yaml example

In this example, the base href rotates from b0, b1, ... b9 and then back to b0. However, this is arbitrary, as long as you aren't repeating base hrefs more than once every couple of weeks.

runtime: python37
service: default

handlers:
- url: /b3/(.*\.(html|htm|map|js))$
  static_files: b3/\1
  upload: b3/.*\.(html|htm|map|js)$
  secure: always

- url: /b3/assets/
  static_dir: b3/assets
  secure: always

index.html example using Flask template

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
  <title>My App</title>
  <base href="/{{base_href}}/">
  <meta charset="UTF-8">
  <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
</head>

<body>
<p>Hello world!</p>
</body>
</html>

One way to streamline the development process is to create a Python script to update the base hrefs in all impacted files.

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