It's not part of the URL, but you can send a pragma: no_cache directive
to the cache along with the request (this is what browsers do, or should
do, when you click reload) to force theproxy to reload the original object.
-Dave Andersen
Lo and behold, Mikel Lindsaar once said:
>
> Is there a symbol one can put in the url being fetched to inform the cache
> to reget the object?
>
> eg:
>
> http://www.some.com.au/ <-- is a valid url
>
> http://www.some.com.au/?reload <-- the ?reload is the symbol
>
> I have no idea if this is doable this way.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Regards and Salutations,
>
> Mikel
>
> --
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> Mikel Lindsaar | "The dream is the foundation,
> mikel@cynet.net.au | of our society!"
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> Cynet! The Business ISP! http://www.cynet.net.au/
> -----------------------------------------------------------
>
-- angio@aros.net Complete virtual hosting and business-oriented system administration Internet services. (WWW, FTP, email) http://www.aros.net/ http://www.aros.net/about/virtual "There are only two industries that refer to their customers as 'users'."Received on Mon Aug 26 1996 - 23:53:18 MDT
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