Anthony J. Biacco wrote:
Hello, I'm using apache 2.2.11 on centos 5/x86_64 I'm testing out caching data for GET requests using mod_disk_cache, which I have working. I'd also like to cache data for the same requests via the POST method, but this doesn't seem to work. Is this supported? If so, is there any config changes required for this to work? If not, is this feature planned?
Hi. Let me refer you to the following document : http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt (that is the official definition of the HTTP protocol, and how it works).Really. Seriously. I am not pulling your leg. I guarantee that if you read it seriously, you would not need to ask the question above, because you would understand why it does not make sense.
Check section 9, which explains the various methods such as GET and POST, and their differences. In short, it explains that GET is a method that is "idempotent", and POST is not. In normal language, it means that when you do a GET, and then you do the same GET again, it should give you the same response. That is what is meant by "idem potent".
(Typical usage : a search in a database)On the other hand, a POST means that the information you send in the POST, can modify something on the server. Which means that after you do a POST, the server may "not be the same" anymore. So if you re-do the same POST, the answer may be different, because your first POST will have changed something on the server.
(Typical usage : do some "data entry" on the server)That is why it makes sense to cache the results of a GET : since in principle doing the same GET later would give you the same response anyway, then why not cache it, and avoid asking for the same response again ? But a POST is another animal. There would be little point in caching the response, because the next time you make the same POST request, in principle the response will be different, so there is no point in caching the previous one.
Many people think that the difference between a GET and a POST is how the paremeters are passed to the server. That is not true at all. Both can pass the parameters in two ways, the same two ways for both. The difference is not in how you pass the values to the server. The difference is in what you expect your request to do at the server side.
In other words, the simple answer to your question is : No.No browser, no webserver, no proxy server will nor should /ever/ cache the response to a POST. It would be contrary to the HTTP specification.
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