I have a mess with this header, I have read that Cache-Control:must-revalidate
oblige to validate all requests with the source before serving a cached item, but just the stale ones? or all no matter if stale or fresh? I have read both things in different places.
What is the difference with Cache-Control:no-cache
? Because these headers look equivalent to me.
UPDATE 1: I have read this from a book:
The Cache-Control: must-revalidate
response header tells the cache
to bypass the freshness calculation mechanisms and revalidate on every
access:
@Peter O. has pointed out what the RFC says. So that old book is wrong.
UPDATE 2: In this tutorial : http://www.mnot.net/cache_docs/
no-cache
— forces caches to submit the request to the origin server
for validation before releasing a cached copy, every time. This is
useful to assure that authentication is respected (in combination with
public), or to maintain rigid freshness, without sacrificing all of
the benefits of caching.
must-revalidate
— tells caches that they must
obey any freshness information you give them about a representation.
HTTP allows caches to serve stale representations under special
conditions; by specifying this header, you’re telling the cache that
you want it to strictly follow your rules.
Section 14.9.4 of HTTP/1.1:
When the must-revalidate directive is present in a response
received by
a cache, that cache MUST NOT use the entry after it becomes
stale
to respond to a subsequent request without first revalidating it
with the
origin server
Section 14.8 of HTTP/1.1:
If the response includes the "must-revalidate" cache-control
directive, the cache MAY use that response in replying to a
subsequent request. But if the response is stale, all caches
MUST first revalidate it with the origin server...
So it appears that only stale responses must be revalidated if
must-revalidate
is received.
For no-cache
, see section 14.9.1:
If the no-cache directive does not specify a field-name [which is
the case
here], then a cache MUST NOT use the response to satisfy a
subsequent
request without successful revalidation with the origin server...
Thus, no-cache
applies both to fresh and stale responses.
EDIT:
This phrase may be relevant here (section 13.3):
When a cache has a stale entry that it would like to use as a response
to a client's request, it first has to check with the origin server
(or possibly an intermediate cache with a fresh response) to see if
its cached entry is still usable.
So, must-revalidate
is probably relevant when the cache has intermediate
caches, since otherwise the cache can check the intermediate cache for a
fresh response rather than check the origin server directly.