- Web cache
Web caching is the caching of
web document s (e.g., HTML pages, images) in order to reduce bandwidth usage, server load, and perceivedlag . A web cache stores copies of documents passing through it; subsequent requests may be satisfied from the cache if certain conditions are met.Types of Web caches
Web caches can be deployed in a variety of ways.
User agent caches, such as those inweb browser s, are "private caches", operating on behalf of a single user. Intermediaries can also implement "shared caches" that serve more than one person.Proxy caches, also known as "forward proxy caches", are usually deployed by
internet service provider s, schools and corporations to save bandwidth. Interception proxy caches (sometimes called "transparent caches") are a variant that doesn't require clients to be explicitly configured to use them.Gateway caches, sometimes known as
reverse proxy caches, "surrogate caches", orweb accelerator s, operate on behalf of the origin server, and to clients are indistinguishable from it. A number of gateway caches can work together to implement aContent Delivery Network .Intermediaries that cache often perform other duties, such as user
authentication and content filtering. Multiple caches can also be coordinated using "peering protocols" likeInternet Cache Protocol andHTCP .Controlling Web caches
HTTP defines three basic mechanisms for controlling caches: freshness, validation and invalidation.*Freshness allows a response to be used without re-checking it on the origin server, and can be controlled by both the server and the client. For example, the Expires response header gives a date when the document becomes stale, and the Cache-Control: max-age directive tells the cache how many seconds the response is fresh for.
*Validation can be used to check whether a cached response is still good after it becomes stale. For example, if the response has a Last-Modified header, a cache can make a "conditional request" using the If-Modified-Since header to see if it has changed.
*Invalidation is usually a side effect of another request that passes through the cache. For example, if URL associated with a cached response subsequently gets a POST, PUT or DELETE request, the cached response will be invalidated.In 1998 the
DMCA added rules to theUnited States Code ( [http://www.bitlaw.com/source/17usc/512.html 17 U.S.C. § 512] ) that relieves system operators from copyright liability for the purposes of caching.Web cache software
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Dijjer
*most proxy server software also caches contentee also
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Proxy server References
* Ari Luotonen, "Web Proxy Servers" (Prentice Hall, 1997) ISBN 0-13-680612-0
* Duane Wessels, "Web Caching" (O'Reilly and Associates, 2001). ISBN 1-56592-536-X
* Michael Rabinovich and Oliver Spatschak, "Web Caching and Replication" (Addison Wesley, 2001). ISBN 0-201-61570-3Vendors
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Akamai Technologies
*Apache Software Foundation
* [http://www.appliansys.com/products/cachebox/index.html ApplianSys]
* [http://www.aranetworks.com ARA Networks]
* [http://www.att.com/ICDS AT&T]
*Blue Coat Systems
* [http://www.cacheright.com CacheRight (port80 software)]
*CDNetworks
*Cisco Systems
*Citrix Systems
*F5 Networks
* [http://www.jetnexus.com jetNEXUS]
* [http://www.limelightnetworks.com/services.htm Limelight Networks]
*LogiSense Corporation
*Strangeloop Networks
*Squid cache
*Zeus Technology External links
* [http://www.mnot.net/cache_docs/ Caching Tutorial for Web Authors and Webmasters]
* [http://www.web-caching.com Web Caching and Content Delivery Resources]
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