One more question regarding this: > The > proxy_no_cache $request_body_file; > should do the trick, see http://nginx.org/r/proxy_no_cache.
I tried this and get a warning: nginx: [warn] "proxy_no_cache" functionality has been changed in 0.8.46, now it should be used together with "proxy_cache_bypass" Do I just need to add an additional line: proxy_cache_bypass $request_body_file; It is not clear to me how proxy_cache_bypass is different from proxy_no_cache. On Fri, Sep 13, 2013 at 8:56 PM, Jeroen Ooms <[email protected]> wrote: > Is it correct that when $content_length > client_body_buffer_size, > then $request_body == "" ? If so this would be worth documenting at > request_body. > > I am using: > > proxy_cache_methods POST; > proxy_cache_key "$request_method$request_uri$request_body"; > > Which works for small requests, but for large requests clients got > very strange results due to $request_body being empty and hence > getting false cache hits for completely different form posts. > > Is there something available like $body_hash that can be used as a > caching key even for large request bodies? Or alternatively, how > would I configure nginx to not cache requests when content_length > is larger than client_body_buffer_size? _______________________________________________ nginx mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginx
