Can I cache this? 
CachePolicy
tells when responses can be reused from a
cache, taking into account HTTP RFC 7234 rules for
user agents and shared caches. It also implements RFC 5861, implementing
stale-if-error
and stale-while-revalidate
.
It’s aware of many tricky details such as the Vary
header,
proxy revalidation, and authenticated responses.
Usage
Cacheability of an HTTP response depends on how it was requested, so
both request
and response
are required to
create the policy.
const policy = new CachePolicy(request, response, options);
if (!policy.storable()) {
// throw the response away, it's not usable at all
return;
}
// Cache the data AND the policy object in your cache
// (this is pseudocode, roll your own cache (lru-cache package works))
.set(
letsPretendThisIsSomeCache.url,
request, response },
{ policy.timeToLive()
policy; )
// And later, when you receive a new request:
const { policy, response } = letsPretendThisIsSomeCache.get(newRequest.url);
// It's not enough that it exists in the cache, it has to match the new request, too:
if (policy && policy.satisfiesWithoutRevalidation(newRequest)) {
// OK, the previous response can be used to respond to the `newRequest`.
// Response headers have to be updated, e.g. to add Age and remove uncacheable headers.
.headers = policy.responseHeaders();
responsereturn response;
}
It may be surprising, but it’s not enough for an HTTP response to be
fresh to satisfy a request. It may need to match
request headers specified in Vary
. Even a matching fresh
response may still not be usable if the new request restricted
cacheability, etc.
The key method is
satisfiesWithoutRevalidation(newRequest)
, which checks
whether the newRequest
is compatible with the original
request and whether all caching conditions are met.
Constructor options
Request and response must have a headers
property with
all header names in lower case. url
, status
and method
are optional (defaults are any URL, status
200
, and GET
method).
const request = {
url: '/',
method: 'GET',
headers: {
accept: '*/*',
,
};
}
const response = {
status: 200,
headers: {
'cache-control': 'public, max-age=7234',
,
};
}
const options = {
shared: true,
cacheHeuristic: 0.1,
immutableMinTimeToLive: 24 * 3600 * 1000, // 24h
ignoreCargoCult: false,
; }
If options.shared
is true
(default), then
the response is evaluated from a perspective of a shared cache
(i.e. private
is not cacheable and s-maxage
is
respected). If options.shared
is false
, then
the response is evaluated from a perspective of a single-user cache
(i.e. private
is cacheable and s-maxage
is
ignored). shared: true
is recommended for HTTP clients.
options.cacheHeuristic
is a fraction of response’s age
that is used as a fallback cache duration. The default is 0.1 (10%),
e.g. if a file hasn’t been modified for 100 days, it’ll be cached for
100*0.1 = 10 days.
options.immutableMinTimeToLive
is a number of
milliseconds to assume as the default time to cache responses with
Cache-Control: immutable
. Note that per RFC
these can become stale, so max-age
still overrides the
default.
If options.ignoreCargoCult
is true, common anti-cache
directives will be completely ignored if the non-standard
pre-check
and post-check
directives are
present. These two useless directives are most commonly found in bad
StackOverflow answers and PHP’s “session limiter” defaults.
storable()
Returns true
if the response can be stored in a cache.
If it’s false
then you MUST NOT store either the request or
the response.
satisfiesWithoutRevalidation(newRequest)
This is the most important method. Use this method to check whether the cached response is still fresh in the context of the new request.
If it returns true
, then the given request
matches the original response this cache policy has been created with,
and the response can be reused without contacting the server. Note that
the old response can’t be returned without being updated, see
responseHeaders()
.
If it returns false
, then the response may not be
matching at all (e.g. it’s for a different URL or method), or may
require to be refreshed first (see
revalidationHeaders()
).
responseHeaders()
Returns updated, filtered set of response headers to return to
clients receiving the cached response. This function is necessary,
because proxies MUST always remove hop-by-hop headers (such as
TE
and Connection
) and update response’s
Age
to avoid doubling cache time.
.headers = cachePolicy.responseHeaders(cachedResponse); cachedResponse
timeToLive()
Returns approximate time in milliseconds until the response becomes stale (i.e. not fresh).
After that time (when timeToLive() <= 0
) the response
might not be usable without revalidation. However, there are exceptions,
e.g. a client can explicitly allow stale responses, so always check with
satisfiesWithoutRevalidation()
. stale-if-error
and stale-while-revalidate
extend the time to live of the
cache, that can still be used if stale.
toObject()
/fromObject(json)
Chances are you’ll want to store the CachePolicy
object
along with the cached response. obj = policy.toObject()
gives a plain JSON-serializable object.
policy = CachePolicy.fromObject(obj)
creates an instance
from it.
Refreshing stale cache (revalidation)
When a cached response has expired, it can be made fresh again by making a request to the origin server. The server may respond with status 304 (Not Modified) without sending the response body again, saving bandwidth.
The following methods help perform the update efficiently and correctly.
revalidationHeaders(newRequest)
Returns updated, filtered set of request headers to send to the origin server to check if the cached response can be reused. These headers allow the origin server to return status 304 indicating the response is still fresh. All headers unrelated to caching are passed through as-is.
Use this method when updating cache from the origin server.
.headers = cachePolicy.revalidationHeaders(updateRequest); updateRequest
revalidatedPolicy(revalidationRequest, revalidationResponse)
Use this method to update the cache after receiving a new response from the origin server. It returns an object with two keys:
policy
— A newCachePolicy
with HTTP headers updated fromrevalidationResponse
. You can always replace the old cachedCachePolicy
with the new one.modified
— Boolean indicating whether the response body has changed.- If
false
, then a valid 304 Not Modified response has been received, and you can reuse the old cached response body. This is also affected bystale-if-error
. - If
true
, you should use new response’s body (if present), or make another request to the origin server without any conditional headers (i.e. don’t userevalidationHeaders()
this time) to get the new resource.
- If
// When serving requests from cache:
const { oldPolicy, oldResponse } = letsPretendThisIsSomeCache.get(
.url
newRequest;
)
if (!oldPolicy.satisfiesWithoutRevalidation(newRequest)) {
// Change the request to ask the origin server if the cached response can be used
.headers = oldPolicy.revalidationHeaders(newRequest);
newRequest
// Send request to the origin server. The server may respond with status 304
const newResponse = await makeRequest(newRequest);
// Create updated policy and combined response from the old and new data
const { policy, modified } = oldPolicy.revalidatedPolicy(
,
newRequest
newResponse;
)const response = modified ? newResponse : oldResponse;
// Update the cache with the newer/fresher response
.set(
letsPretendThisIsSomeCache.url,
newRequest, response },
{ policy.timeToLive()
policy;
)
// And proceed returning cached response as usual
.headers = policy.responseHeaders();
responsereturn response;
}
Yo, FRESH

Used by
Implemented
Cache-Control
response header with all the quirks.Expires
with check for bad clocks.Pragma
response header.Age
response header.Vary
response header.- Default cacheability of statuses and methods.
- Requests for stale data.
- Filtering of hop-by-hop headers.
- Basic revalidation request
stale-if-error
Unimplemented
- Merging of range requests,
If-Range
(but correctly supports them as non-cacheable) - Revalidation of multiple representations
Trusting server Date
Per the RFC, the cache should take into account the time between
server-supplied Date
and the time it received the response.
The RFC-mandated behavior creates two problems:
- Servers with incorrectly set timezone may add several hours to cache age (or more, if the clock is completely wrong).
- Even reasonably correct clocks may be off by a couple of seconds,
breaking
max-age=1
trick (which is useful for reverse proxies on high-traffic servers).
Previous versions of this library had an option to ignore the server
date if it was “too inaccurate”. To support the max-age=1
trick the library also has to ignore dates that pretty accurate. There’s
no point of having an option to trust dates that are only a bit
inaccurate, so this library won’t trust any server dates.
max-age
will be interpreted from the time the response has
been received, not from when it has been sent. This will affect only RFC 1149 networks.