Caching a jquery ajax response in javascript/browser

JavascriptJqueryAjaxCachingBrowser

Javascript Problem Overview


I would like to enable caching of an ajax response in javascript/browser.

From the jquery.ajax docs:

> By default, requests are always issued, but the browser may serve > results out of its cache. To disallow use of the cached results, set > cache to false. To cause the request to report failure if the asset > has not been modified since the last request, set ifModified to true.

However, neither of these address forcing caching.

Motivation: I want to put $.ajax({...}) calls in my initialisation functions, some of which request the same url. Sometimes I need to call one of these initialisation functions, sometimes I call several.

So, I want to minimise the requests to the server if that particular url has already been loaded.

I could roll my own solution (with some difficulty!), but I would like to know if there is a standard way of doing this.

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

cache:true only works with GET and HEAD request.

You could roll your own solution as you said with something along these lines :

var localCache = {
    data: {},
    remove: function (url) {
        delete localCache.data[url];
    },
    exist: function (url) {
        return localCache.data.hasOwnProperty(url) && localCache.data[url] !== null;
    },
    get: function (url) {
        console.log('Getting in cache for url' + url);
        return localCache.data[url];
    },
    set: function (url, cachedData, callback) {
        localCache.remove(url);
        localCache.data[url] = cachedData;
        if ($.isFunction(callback)) callback(cachedData);
    }
};

$(function () {
    var url = '/echo/jsonp/';
    $('#ajaxButton').click(function (e) {
        $.ajax({
            url: url,
            data: {
                test: 'value'
            },
            cache: true,
            beforeSend: function () {
                if (localCache.exist(url)) {
                    doSomething(localCache.get(url));
                    return false;
                }
                return true;
            },
            complete: function (jqXHR, textStatus) {
                localCache.set(url, jqXHR, doSomething);
            }
        });
    });
});

function doSomething(data) {
    console.log(data);
}

Working fiddle here

EDIT: as this post becomes popular, here is an even better answer for those who want to manage timeout cache and you also don't have to bother with all the mess in the $.ajax() as I use $.ajaxPrefilter(). Now just setting {cache: true} is enough to handle the cache correctly :

var localCache = {
    /**
     * timeout for cache in millis
     * @type {number}
     */
    timeout: 30000,
    /** 
     * @type {{_: number, data: {}}}
     **/
    data: {},
    remove: function (url) {
        delete localCache.data[url];
    },
    exist: function (url) {
        return !!localCache.data[url] && ((new Date().getTime() - localCache.data[url]._) < localCache.timeout);
    },
    get: function (url) {
        console.log('Getting in cache for url' + url);
        return localCache.data[url].data;
    },
    set: function (url, cachedData, callback) {
        localCache.remove(url);
        localCache.data[url] = {
            _: new Date().getTime(),
            data: cachedData
        };
        if ($.isFunction(callback)) callback(cachedData);
    }
};

$.ajaxPrefilter(function (options, originalOptions, jqXHR) {
    if (options.cache) {
        var complete = originalOptions.complete || $.noop,
            url = originalOptions.url;
        //remove jQuery cache as we have our own localCache
        options.cache = false;
        options.beforeSend = function () {
            if (localCache.exist(url)) {
                complete(localCache.get(url));
                return false;
            }
            return true;
        };
        options.complete = function (data, textStatus) {
            localCache.set(url, data, complete);
        };
    }
});

$(function () {
    var url = '/echo/jsonp/';
    $('#ajaxButton').click(function (e) {
        $.ajax({
            url: url,
            data: {
                test: 'value'
            },
            cache: true,
            complete: doSomething
        });
    });
});

function doSomething(data) {
    console.log(data);
}

And the fiddle here CAREFUL, not working with $.Deferred

Here is a working but flawed implementation working with deferred:

var localCache = {
    /**
     * timeout for cache in millis
     * @type {number}
     */
    timeout: 30000,
    /** 
     * @type {{_: number, data: {}}}
     **/
    data: {},
    remove: function (url) {
        delete localCache.data[url];
    },
    exist: function (url) {
        return !!localCache.data[url] && ((new Date().getTime() - localCache.data[url]._) < localCache.timeout);
    },
    get: function (url) {
        console.log('Getting in cache for url' + url);
        return localCache.data[url].data;
    },
    set: function (url, cachedData, callback) {
        localCache.remove(url);
        localCache.data[url] = {
            _: new Date().getTime(),
            data: cachedData
        };
        if ($.isFunction(callback)) callback(cachedData);
    }
};

$.ajaxPrefilter(function (options, originalOptions, jqXHR) {
    if (options.cache) {
        //Here is our identifier for the cache. Maybe have a better, safer ID (it depends on the object string representation here) ?
        // on $.ajax call we could also set an ID in originalOptions
        var id = originalOptions.url+ JSON.stringify(originalOptions.data);
        options.cache = false;
        options.beforeSend = function () {
            if (!localCache.exist(id)) {
                jqXHR.promise().done(function (data, textStatus) {
                    localCache.set(id, data);
                });
            }
            return true;
        };

    }
});

$.ajaxTransport("+*", function (options, originalOptions, jqXHR, headers, completeCallback) {

    //same here, careful because options.url has already been through jQuery processing
    var id = originalOptions.url+ JSON.stringify(originalOptions.data);
    
    options.cache = false;

    if (localCache.exist(id)) {
        return {
            send: function (headers, completeCallback) {
                completeCallback(200, "OK", localCache.get(id));
            },
            abort: function () {
                /* abort code, nothing needed here I guess... */
            }
        };
    }
});

$(function () {
    var url = '/echo/jsonp/';
    $('#ajaxButton').click(function (e) {
        $.ajax({
            url: url,
            data: {
                test: 'value'
            },
            cache: true
        }).done(function (data, status, jq) {
            console.debug({
                data: data,
                status: status,
                jqXHR: jq
            });
        });
    });
});

Fiddle HERE Some issues, our cache ID is dependent of the json2 lib JSON object representation.

Use Console view (F12) or FireBug to view some logs generated by the cache.

Solution 2 - Javascript

I was looking for caching for my phonegap app storage and I found the answer of @TecHunter which is great but done using localCache.

I found and come to know that localStorage is another alternative to cache the data returned by ajax call. So, I created one demo using localStorage which will help others who may want to use localStorage instead of localCache for caching.

Ajax Call:

$.ajax({
    type: "POST",
    dataType: 'json',
    contentType: "application/json; charset=utf-8",
    url: url,
    data: '{"Id":"' + Id + '"}',
    cache: true, //It must "true" if you want to cache else "false"
    //async: false,
    success: function (data) {
        var resData = JSON.parse(data);
        var Info = resData.Info;
        if (Info) {
            customerName = Info.FirstName;
        }
    },
    error: function (xhr, textStatus, error) {
        alert("Error Happened!");
    }
});

To store data into localStorage:

$.ajaxPrefilter(function (options, originalOptions, jqXHR) {
if (options.cache) {
    var success = originalOptions.success || $.noop,
        url = originalOptions.url;

    options.cache = false; //remove jQuery cache as we have our own localStorage
    options.beforeSend = function () {
        if (localStorage.getItem(url)) {
            success(localStorage.getItem(url));
            return false;
        }
        return true;
    };
    options.success = function (data, textStatus) {
        var responseData = JSON.stringify(data.responseJSON);
        localStorage.setItem(url, responseData);
        if ($.isFunction(success)) success(responseJSON); //call back to original ajax call
    };
}
});

If you want to remove localStorage, use following statement wherever you want:

localStorage.removeItem("Info");

Hope it helps others!

Solution 3 - Javascript

All the modern browsers provides you storage apis. You can use them (localStorage or sessionStorage) to save your data.

All you have to do is after receiving the response store it to browser storage. Then next time you find the same call, search if the response is saved already. If yes, return the response from there; if not make a fresh call.

Smartjax plugin also does similar things; but as your requirement is just saving the call response, you can write your code inside your jQuery ajax success function to save the response. And before making call just check if the response is already saved.

Solution 4 - Javascript

If I understood your question, here is the solution :

	$.ajaxSetup({ cache: true});

and for specific calls

 $.ajax({
        url: ...,
        type: "GET",
        cache: false,           
        ...
    });

If you want opposite (cache for specific calls) you can set false at the beginning and true for specific calls.

Solution 5 - Javascript

Old question, but my solution is a bit different.

I was writing a single page web app that was constantly making ajax calls triggered by the user, and to make it even more difficult it required libraries that used methods other than jquery (like dojo, native xhr, etc). I wrote a plugin for one of my own libraries to cache ajax requests as efficiently as possible in a way that would work in all major browsers, regardless of which libraries were being used to make the ajax call.

The solution uses jSQL (written by me - a client-side persistent SQL implementation written in javascript which uses indexeddb and other dom storage methods), and is bundled with another library called XHRCreep (written by me) which is a complete re-write of the native XHR object.

To implement all you need to do is include the plugin in your page, which is here.

There are two options:

jSQL.xhrCache.max_time = 60;

Set the maximum age in minutes. any cached responses that are older than this are re-requested. Default is 1 hour.

jSQL.xhrCache.logging = true;

When set to true, mock XHR calls will be shown in the console for debugging.

You can clear the cache on any given page via

jSQL.tables = {}; jSQL.persist();

Solution 6 - Javascript

        function getDatas() {
            let cacheKey = 'memories';

            if (cacheKey in localStorage) {
                let datas = JSON.parse(localStorage.getItem(cacheKey));

                // if expired
                if (datas['expires'] < Date.now()) {
                    localStorage.removeItem(cacheKey);

                    getDatas()
                } else {
                    setDatas(datas);
                }
            } else {
                $.ajax({
                    "dataType": "json",
                    "success": function(datas, textStatus, jqXHR) {
                        let today = new Date();

                        datas['expires'] = today.setDate(today.getDate() + 7) // expires in next 7 days

                        setDatas(datas);

                        localStorage.setItem(cacheKey, JSON.stringify(datas));
                    },
                    "url": "http://localhost/phunsanit/snippets/PHP/json.json_encode.php",
                });
            }
        }

        function setDatas(datas) {
            // display json as text
            $('#datasA').text(JSON.stringify(datas));

            // your code here
           ....

        }

        // call
        getDatas();

enter link description here

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestioncammilView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptTecHunterView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptimmayankmodiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavascriptPaul ShanView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - JavascriptspringView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - JavascriptI wrestled a bear once.View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - Javascriptuser1634982View Answer on Stackoverflow