Weird.

Try the following instead:

$r->headers_out->set('Pragma' => 'no-cache');
$r->headers_out->set('Cache-Control' => 'no-cache');

I've actually never used 'no_cache' before but instead used the above two
lines.

Let me know if it works for you.

Thanks,

Paul

On Mon, Sep 7, 2015 at 4:39 PM, Michel Jansen <mailmas...@web-ict.com>
wrote:

>
> Hi Paul,
>
> You wrote:
>
> Helle Michel,
>
> Are you calling $r->no_cache before any response data has been sent?
>
>
> Yes. Before setting the content type to text/html.
>
> When you say the browser receives a '0' in the response, what do you mean
> exactly?
>
>
> My Ajax responder sends some fields separated by | which are being split
> and then distributed into a page. The 0 is received by the JavaScript which
> performes the Ajax request as first response and is then connected to the
> first field.
>
> Do i make sense ?
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Paul
>
> On Mon, Sep 7, 2015 at 4:15 PM, Michel Jansen <michel.jan...@web-ict.com>
> wrote:
>
>> if i add $r->no_cache(1) to an ajax responder perl script the browser
>> receives a 0 in the response, what am i doing wrong?
>>
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Michel
>>
>
>

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