- From: Henrik Frystyk Nielsen <frystyk@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 5 Jun 1995 18:27:54 +0500
- To: www-talk@www10.w3.org, koen@win.tue.nl
> The convention is that CGI script generated responses will never have > Last-modified headers in them. > > Http servers attach Last-modified headers when sending normal document > contents, because they can easily get the last modified date by > looking at the file date. Servers cannot (automatically) generate a > Last-modified to go with script output, so they don't. Summarizing, > CGI scripts are not required by the spec to omit a last-modified > header, but in practice they all do. > > Thus, the lack of Last-modified is a means of telling that a response > came from a script. This doesn't necessarily make it a good thing ;-) You can't and shouldn't make any assumptions on the origin of documents from missing headers! > As far as I know, all popular proxy caches never cache responses that > lack both a Last-modified header and an Expires header. Thus, no > popular proxy will cache CGI script output, unless of course the CGI > script author adds one of these headers by hand. There is no reason to forbid caching of CGI scripts (actually from the fact that you can't tell). A way of doing this is, if you don't get a Last-Modified or a Expires header, to assume that the document was last modified when the document was received. Then upon the next request the cache can issue a "GET If-Modified-Since" and everything works fine! If the update rate of the script results on the origin server is greater than the request rate through the cache then band width is saved! -- Henrik Frystyk frystyk@W3.org World-Wide Web Consortium, Tel + 1 617 258 8143 MIT/LCS, NE43-356 Fax + 1 617 258 8682 77 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge MA 02154, USA
Received on Monday, 5 June 1995 18:28:07 UTC