When developing a web script, you can specify whether its response is to be cached
and, if so, how it is to be cached through the web script descriptor document.
The optional <cache> element of the web script descriptor provides the following cache flags:
- never
- (Optional) Specifies whether caching should be applied at all. If true, the web script response should never be cached; otherwise, the web script response can be cached.
- public
- (Optional) Specifies whether authenticated responses should be cached in a public cache. If true, the web script response should never be cached; otherwise, the web script response can be cached.
- mustrevalidate
- (Optional) Specifies whether a cache must revalidate its version of the web script response in order to ensure freshness. If true, the cache must revalidate; otherwise, the cache can revalidate.
For example, the following web script descriptor specifies that responses can be
cached, but never in a public cache as the response requires authentication, and that the
cache must revalidate to ensure freshness of the
content.
<webscript> <shortname>Design time cache sample</shortname> <url>/cache</url> <authentication>user</authentication> <cache> <never>false</never> <public>false</public> <mustrevalidate/> </cache> </webscript>