On Fri, Feb 16, 2018 at 01:49:59PM +, Friscia, Michael wrote:
Hi there,
> Thank you, this was incredibly useful and helped me think this through in
> Nginx terms and I have everything working now. Thank you again!
You're welcome.
Good to hear that you have things working the way you want t
Thank you, this was incredibly useful and helped me think this through in Nginx
terms and I have everything working now. Thank you again!
Minor side question, is there a variable I can use to post to a debug header to
indicate if a page was newly written to the cache versus a page that was read
On Thu, Feb 15, 2018 at 01:22:04PM +, Friscia, Michael wrote:
Hi there,
> To add one more thing. I mentioned that my testing failed. Exactly what was
> failing is that the map{} block that worked and then stopped working was the
> problem, the $nocache variable would always return the defau
To add one more thing. I mentioned that my testing failed. Exactly what was
failing is that the map{} block that worked and then stopped working was the
problem, the $nocache variable would always return the default value no matter
what I did.
So in a previous post the suggested code was
proxy_
Yes, I should have explained the problem up front. I made the wrong assumption
I was asking a simple question and quickly realized I was getting good answers
but my approach was likely flawed from the start.
We are using Nginx just as a cache mechanism across many custom DNS names. As a
result
I think that part of the power and challenge of using nginx’s caching is that
there are many different ways
of achieving the same or similar results, but some of the approaches will be
more awkward than others.
I think that it might help if you could express what the issue is that you are
try
Hi,
Yes NGINX can inspect the header, See the following full example. It will
check for the match of "true" case-insensitive. I am simulating your backend
on port 81. Does this make sense?
map $upstream_http_x_secured_page $nocache {
~*true "1";
default
Maybe that’s the problem, I want to disable cache if the response header is
true but not do anything if it is false. I can change my logic in creating this
header to only have it on pages where cache should be disabled if it is not
possible to use an IF statement around it. I will post my config
Hi,
The map is processed on each request and should be very consistent.
I thought you wanted to disable cache on the existence of a response header,
not a request header.
Otherwise I think we need more information to understand, such as how are
you testing? Perhaps paste your full configuration
Ok, so I did this and it worked and then it stopped working, then it worked
again and then stopped working. I literally used the code below, the map
appears right above my server {} block. When it worked I was passing a header
with the $nocache value set and it was consistently returning the co
Ok, I think this sends me into the correct direction. Thanks for posting the
links and explaining the _bypass, I was setting both _bypass and _no_cache
because I wasn’t sure.
___
Michael Friscia
Office of Communications
Yale School of Medicine
(203) 737-79
You can use map for this...
- http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_map_module.html#map
map $upstream_http_x_secured_page $nocache {
"search string" "1"
default "";
}
location /foo {
...
proxy_no_cache $nocache;
}
Posted at Nginx Forum:
https:/
Hi,
If I understand correctly you actually don't want to cache specific
responses (not bypass). The proxy_cache_bypass is only for if the response
has already been cached and defines the behavior in which NGINX should serve
the cached version to a client.
Therefore if I understand correctly, you
Thank you Roman, but this raises a different question, if I want to base this
on the value and not the existence, is that still possible?
___
Michael Friscia
Office of Communications
Yale School of Medicine
(203) 737-7932 - office
(203) 931-5381 - mobile
ht
Hi Michael,
On Wed, Feb 14, 2018 at 02:09:57PM +, Friscia, Michael wrote:
> I’m at a loss on this. I am working on a cache problem where some pages need
> to be bypassed and others will be cached. So the web server is adding a
> response header (X-Secured-Page). I’ve tried multiple combinati
I’m at a loss on this. I am working on a cache problem where some pages need to
be bypassed and others will be cached. So the web server is adding a response
header (X-Secured-Page). I’ve tried multiple combinations of
$http_x_secured_page and $sent_http_x_secured_page and even though I see the
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