Middleware for ExpressJS that defines a cacheControl
method to set Cache-Control
headers.
This middleware doesn't define legacy Expires headers. For compatibility with old HTTP/1.0 agents combine it with express-legacy-expires.
$ npm install express-cache-response-directive
var cacheResponseDirective = require('express-cache-response-directive');
app.use(cacheResponseDirective());
app.get('/', function(req, res, next) {
res.cacheControl({maxAge: 300});
// ...
});
The method added by the middleware accepts an optional string pattern and an object of Cache-Control options. Both are optional but at least one of them should be specified.
See the HTTP/1.1 Standard's Cache-Control sections for information on the usage of Cache-Control directives.
String patterns are defined for simple directives so you can simply write res.cacheControl("public");
instead of having to always write res.cacheControl({'public': true});
. Patterns can be combined with options res.cacheControl("public", {mustRevalidate: true});
.
res.cacheControl("public");
// Cache-Control: public
res.cacheControl("private");
// Cache-Control: private
res.cacheControl("no-cache");
// Cache-Control: no-cache
res.cacheControl("no-store");
// Cache-Control: no-cache, no-store
Each Cache-Control response directive defined in HTTP/1.1 has an option that can be defined.
- Options for directives that use a delta time accept a number as a value.
- Time values may also be expressed as strings like "3 min", "1h", "5 days".
- Options that optionally accept field names accept
true
for the normal non-field directive and for the with field-name directive accept either a string or an array of strings for the field names. - The remaining directives that don't have a value simply accept a truthy value.
The public, private, no-cache, and no-store directives are exclusive only one may be specified. With the exception that no-cache and no-store may be defined together.
res.cacheControl({'public': true});
// Cache-Control: public
res.cacheControl({'private': true});
// Cache-Control: private
res.cacheControl({'private': "X-Private"});
// Cache-Control: private="X-Private"
res.cacheControl({'private': ["X-Private-1", "X-Private-2"]});
// Cache-Control: private="X-Private-1, X-Private-2"
res.cacheControl({'no-cache': true});
res.cacheControl({noCache: true});
// Cache-Control: no-cache
res.cacheControl({noCache: "X-Uncached"});
// Cache-Control: no-cache="X-Uncached"
res.cacheControl({noCache: ["X-Uncached-1", "X-Uncached-2"]});
// Cache-Control: no-cache="X-Uncached-1, X-Uncached-2"
res.cacheControl({'no-store': true});
res.cacheControl({noStore: true});
// Cache-Control: no-cache, no-store
no-store
also impliesno-cache
because some browsers have begun treating no-cache the same way they treat no-store.
res.cacheControl({'max-age': 300});
res.cacheControl({maxAge: 300});
res.cacheControl({maxAge: "5min"});
// Cache-Control: public, max-age=300
max-age
implies public if none of private, no-cache, or no-store is defined, so you can define it alone.
res.cacheControl({'s-maxage': 300});
res.cacheControl({sMaxage: 300});
res.cacheControl({sMaxAge: 300});
// Cache-Control: public, s-maxage=300
s-maxage
supportssMaxAge
in addition to the standard camel-case conversionsMaxage
due to the potential confusion of themax-age
tomaxAge
conversion.
res.cacheControl({'must-revalidate': true});
res.cacheControl({mustRevalidate: true});
// Cache-Control: must-revalidate
res.cacheControl({'proxy-revalidate': true});
res.cacheControl({proxyRevalidate: true});
// Cache-Control: proxy-revalidate
res.cacheControl({noTransform: true});
res.cacheControl({'no-transform': true});
// Cache-Control: no-transform