Which is the best method to make the browser use cached versions of js files (from the serverside)?
8 Answers
Have a look at Yahoo! tips: https://developer.yahoo.com/performance/rules.html#expires.
There are also tips by Google: https://developers.google.com/speed/docs/insights/LeverageBrowserCaching

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or in the .htaccess file
AddOutputFilter DEFLATE css js
ExpiresActive On
ExpiresByType application/x-javascript A2592000

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19^ The question doesn't mention Apache, so... anything is valid, C would have also been valid. – Carlos Pliego Oct 01 '15 at 21:15
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[Source/Explanation](http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_expires.html#expiresbytype) – lucidbrot Aug 07 '18 at 17:50
I just finished my weekend project cached-webpgr.js which uses the localStorage / web storage to cache JavaScript files. This approach is very fast. My small test showed
- Loading jQuery from CDN: Chrome 268ms, FireFox: 200ms
- Loading jQuery from localStorage: Chrome 47ms, FireFox 14ms
The code to achieve that is tiny, you can check it out at my Github project https://github.com/webpgr/cached-webpgr.js
Here is a full example how to use it.
The complete library:
function _cacheScript(c,d,e){var a=new XMLHttpRequest;a.onreadystatechange=function(){4==a.readyState&&(200==a.status?localStorage.setItem(c,JSON.stringify({content:a.responseText,version:d})):console.warn("error loading "+e))};a.open("GET",e,!0);a.send()}function _loadScript(c,d,e,a){var b=document.createElement("script");b.readyState?b.onreadystatechange=function(){if("loaded"==b.readyState||"complete"==b.readyState)b.onreadystatechange=null,_cacheScript(d,e,c),a&&a()}:b.onload=function(){_cacheScript(d,e,c);a&&a()};b.setAttribute("src",c);document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0].appendChild(b)}function _injectScript(c,d,e,a){var b=document.createElement("script");b.type="text/javascript";c=JSON.parse(c);var f=document.createTextNode(c.content);b.appendChild(f);document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0].appendChild(b);c.version!=e&&localStorage.removeItem(d);a&&a()}function requireScript(c,d,e,a){var b=localStorage.getItem(c);null==b?_loadScript(e,c,d,a):_injectScript(b,c,d,a)};
Calling the library
requireScript('jquery', '1.11.2', 'http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.2/jquery.min.js', function(){
requireScript('examplejs', '0.0.3', 'example.js');
});

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From PHP:
function OutputJs($Content)
{
ob_start();
echo $Content;
$expires = DAY_IN_S; // 60 * 60 * 24 ... defined elsewhere
header("Content-type: x-javascript");
header('Content-Length: ' . ob_get_length());
header('Cache-Control: max-age='.$expires.', must-revalidate');
header('Pragma: public');
header('Expires: '. gmdate('D, d M Y H:i:s', time()+$expires).'GMT');
ob_end_flush();
return;
}
works for me.
As a developer you'll probably quickly run into the situation that you don't want files cached, in which case see Help with aggressive JavaScript caching
In your Apache .htaccess file:
#Create filter to match files you want to cache
<Files *.js>
Header add "Cache-Control" "max-age=604800"
</Files>
I wrote about it here also:
http://betterexplained.com/articles/how-to-optimize-your-site-with-http-caching/

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I am heavily tempted to close this as a duplicate; this question appears to be answered in many different ways all over the site:

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Seems like a good candidate for a general communitywiki question then? It is obviously an itch that lots of people need scratched. – Ken Nov 22 '08 at 08:35
The best (and only) method is to set correct HTTP headers, specifically these ones: "Expires", "Last-Modified", and "Cache-Control". How to do it depends on the server software you use.
In Improving performance… look for "Optimization on server side" for general considerations and relevant links and for "Client-side cache" for the Apache-specific advice.
If you are a fan of nginx (or nginx in plain English) like I am, you can easily configure it too:
location /images {
...
expires 4h;
}
In the example above any file from /images/ will be cached on the client for 4 hours.
Now when you know right words to look for (HTTP headers "Expires", "Last-Modified", and "Cache-Control"), just peruse the documentation of the web server you use.

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I have a simple system that is pure JavaScript. It checks for changes in a simple text file that is never cached. When you upload a new version this file is changed. Just put the following JS at the top of the page.
(function(url, storageName) {
var fromStorage = localStorage.getItem(storageName);
var fullUrl = url + "?rand=" + (Math.floor(Math.random() * 100000000));
getUrl(function(fromUrl) {
// first load
if (!fromStorage) {
localStorage.setItem(storageName, fromUrl);
return;
}
// old file
if (fromStorage === fromUrl) {
return;
}
// files updated
localStorage.setItem(storageName, fromUrl);
location.reload(true);
});
function getUrl(fn) {
var xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xmlhttp.open("GET", fullUrl, true);
xmlhttp.send();
xmlhttp.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (xmlhttp.readyState === XMLHttpRequest.DONE) {
if (xmlhttp.status === 200 || xmlhttp.status === 2) {
fn(xmlhttp.responseText);
}
else if (xmlhttp.status === 400) {
throw 'unable to load file for cache check ' + url;
}
else {
throw 'unable to load file for cache check ' + url;
}
}
};
}
;
})("version.txt", "version");
just replace the "version.txt" with your file that is always run and "version" with the name you want to use for your local storage.

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