I have a mobile app using cache via manifest file working and being in cache very well.
How can I get to information on the server. jQuery.post works no issues but jQuery.get will not because the browser just checks the local CACHE. Is there away of to make .get work.
Putting a random key after ? has zero effect. Is this something browsers willjust not allow going forward?
Related
I'm developing a web app in Dart, packaged in tomcat 6 as a deployable .war. This app is used by a bunch of clients, all with Google Chrome.
Every time I republish a new version, every single client must clear his browser cache before seeing the updated files: this is very annoying and I can't find any solution other than broadcast a mail to everyone "Please clear the browser cache".
The desirable solution is not a complete cache disable but that the browser keeps caching all stuff to be the quicker it could, and that I can control this at my wish.
I'm not sure what your question is about exactly.
There is nothing specific to Dart. Caching is handled by the browser depending on the expires headers the server returns with a response to a request.
What you can do is something like explained here Force browser to clear cache or Forcing cache expiration from a JavaScript file, and make the client application poll the server frequently for updates and then redirect to the new URL. You could implement some kind of redirection on the server or ignore the version URL query parameter, to be able to actually keep the same names of the resources.
Another possibility could be to use AppCache and serve the manifest file with immediate expiration. When you have an updated version modify the manifest file which makes the client reload the resources listed in the manifest (https://stackoverflow.com/a/13107058/217408, https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Using_the_application_cache, http://alistapart.com/article/application-cache-is-a-douchebag#section4).
It's very important for the website I'm working on to be offline-functional. I'm using a Cache Manifest to store all the files on the application cache, so that takes care of that and all is good and well.
BUT, as I read and noticed myself, the browser first shows the cached version of the site before checking for an update online. Hitting refresh reloads the cache again, with the new cached files this time (or what it had time to update for the swift refreshers).
I'm aware of this fix : http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/appcache/beginner/, where the user is told an update is available and is asked to refresh the page. Not a bad method, but still sketchy for user experience.
Is there any other way to force the browser to show the most up to date files if online? Would cache busting all files manually AND using a cache manifest fix this problem, or will it conflict with the cache manifest and cause problem to the offline functionality?
I found something that works well for me:
The URL linking to the web page contains a parameter. If there is ever a change to the page or related files, the url is changed to something like this: http:/ /www.mywebsite.com/mypage.html?v=3 where v=3 is changed depending on updates.
This is a longer fix to implement (finding every page affected by a change & changing all their cache busting links), but the pages at least show what they're supposed to on the first load and the cache manifest still load the update for offline viewing.
I would like to create a rake task or something to clear the browser cache. The issue is, I am running a Flash app, and if I change the data, I more often than not need to reset the browser cache so it removes the old swf and can see the new xml data.
How do you reset the browser cache with ruby? Or even more precisely, how can I only remove a select item from the browser cache?
Thanks for the help!
I see a few possible solutions:
Write some shell script that deletes the temporary files from disk out the cache (what browser are you using?). I'm am not sure deleting the files on disk will necessarily work if the browser has them cached in memory.
Use and HTTP header (No-Cache) to avoid caching in the browser, Adobe has documentation on No-Cache. You could set this header only in development mode, so that in production the swf is cached.
Depending on your browser, force a page and cache refresh (e.g. Crtl-F5 in Firefox)
I'm not sure how you're loading the xml data, but in the past, I've gotten around the issue by appending a random number to the path of the xml file:
xml.load("data.xml?"+Math.random());
Basically, Flash will always think the file is a different URL. It won't be able to find a match in your cache.
Again, I'm not sure how you're loading the XML data, so I'm not sure if this applies to your situation.
Hope it helps, though.
You cannot reset browser cache, even if you would sometimes it will not be sufficient because caching can occur not only on the server and/or client, but also on any number of nodes your response goes through on its way from your server to your client.
The only tool at your disposal is the caching headers.
You can set them to NoCache just keep in mind that it will be hitting the server every time
Since you're using Safari, here's an article describing how to use AppleScript to clear the cache. But you can probably just skip the AppleScript part and remove the files directly in the rake task. The only catch might be that you have to restart the browser for it to take affect, but that could be done with a kill on the process and an "open /Applications/Safari.app" (I'm assuming you're on a Mac; in Windows it would be something like start "c:\program files\Safari...").
Background
I'm building an app that links recent
web pages you've visited together.
To do this, I need to get the HTML
for recent URLs using Cocoa.
Right now, I'm using an invisible
WebView to do this.
As I understand it, if the URL isn't
in the cache for my app, this is
hitting web servers.
What I want
The chances are high that the URL I'm grabbing has already been cached by Safari as the page has already been visited.
I want my app to check Safari's cache for the URL first. If it's there, it should just use this data. If not, it should hit the web server and store the page in my app's cache.
I don't really want to have to parse the cache.db file from Safari using sqlite3 - I've no idea if this format will stay the same. I'm after something simpler and more high level.
What I've tried
I know that you can set up your own NSURLCache using the method initWithMemoryCapacity:diskCapacity:diskPath: but I don't want to try pointing this to the Safari cache in case it screws up Safari by writing to it.
Is there an easy, high level way of sharing the Safari cache?
UPDATE
Aha. I've just realised there may be a way to do this I've been missing.
I could make a new instance of NSURLCache with initWithMemoryCapacity:diskCapacity:diskPath:, point it at the Safari cache, then specify a cache policy of NSURLRequestReturnCacheDataDontLoad for the URL Request when loading the page.
When this fails, I could just try and load the page as normal. I'll try this out and update the question when I know more.
To be honest, you just can't do this.
Firstly, I'm pretty certain -[NSURLCache initWithMemoryCapacity:diskCapacity:diskPath:] won't work as you expect. It will instead blow away the old cache file to create its own; potentially highly upsetting Safari.
Secondly NSURLCache is a composite cache. That is, it caches data first in memory, and then moves it out to disk at some point. So even if you could properly access Safari's cache file (which you can't) you'd only be able to access the older cached data; not the most recent.
Is it possible to clear all site cache? I would like to do this when the user logs out or the session expires instead of instructing the browser not to cache on each request.
As far as I know, there is no way to instruct the browser to clear all the pages it has cached for your site. The only control that you, as a website author, have over caching of a page occurs when the browser tries to access that page. You can specify that cached versions of your pages should expire at a certain time using the Expires header, but even then the browser won't actually clear the page from its cache at that time.
i certainly hope not - that would give the web site destructive powers over the client machine!
If security is your main concern here, why not use HTTPS? Browsers don't cache content received via HTTPS (or cache it only in memory).
One tricky way to mimic this would be to include the session-id as a parameter when referencing any static piece of content on the site. When the user establishes the session, the browser will recognize all the pieces of content as new due to the inclusion of this parameter. For the duration of the session the browser will used the static content in its cache. After the user logs out and logs back in again, the session-id parameter for the static contents will be different, so the browser will recognize this is as completely new content and will download everything again.
That being said... this is a hack and I wouldn't recommend pursuing it.. For what reason do you want the user's cache to be cleared after their session expires? There's probably a better solution that can fit your situation as opposed to what you are currently asking for.
If you are talking about asp.net cache objects, you can use this:
For Each elem As DictionaryEntry In Cache
Cache.Remove(elem.Key)
Next
to remove items from the cache, but that may not be the full-extent of what you are trying to accomplish.