title = 'Hard Problem: Invalidating the browser cache'
+++
**I had a bit of an issue with my [website](https://demos.ajstepien.xyz) recently.**
I pushed some changes incorporating images for the first time (I know, very swish), and everything seemed to be working just fine, but when I loaded the production site in Firefox, the images were not styled. Stranger still, they *were* styled when I loaded the same page in Chrome.
The experienced computer touchers amongst you will be saying "this is obviously a cache problem", and you're right, it is obviously a cache problem. Pressing `CTR + SHIFT + R` (which forces Firefox to clear the cache and do a full reload) proved this thesis, and solved the problem handily for me, on my machine. But what about other people's machines?
## Invalidating cached HTML
The best way to deal with this problem is to tell the browser not to cache our HTML in the first place. We can achieve this by adding the following meta tag to `index.html`, and any other HTML files we don't want cached.
What we need is for the browser to recognize our CSS as a new file and load it anew from the server. We could change the file name whenever we want to bust the cache, but this would get tedious very quickly. What's more, as far as Git is concerned, we'd be deleting the CSS file and writing a new one with every deployment. Surely there's a better way?
As we're requesting the file via http, we can append a query. Awesome. Not awesome enough though. I'm too lazy to do this every time I push a commit, and, being human, I'll probably forget at a critical moment. This can only mean one thing. It's time to bash (🤣) out a quick build script!
```bash
#!/usr/bin/env bash
COMMIT="$(git rev-parse HEAD)"
sed -i "s/css?=\w*/css?v=${COMMIT}/g" index.html
```
Let's talk real quick about what's happening here:
`COMMIT="$(git rev-parse HEAD)"` gets the commit id from Git and assigns it the variable `$COMMIT`.
Then, `sed -i "s/css?=\w*/css?v=${COMMIT}/g" index.html` does a find and replace on `index.html`. The regular expression `css?=\w*` matches 'css?=' plus any number of contiguous alphanumeric characters (everything until the next quote mark, basically) before replacing these alphanumeric characters with the commit id. The flag `-i` tells sed to edit the file in place. The `g` tells it to perform the operation on the whole file.
Now, whenever we push a new commit, any CSS imports in `index.html` will be changed to something like this:
There's just one thing bugging me: surely I do actually want the CSS to be cached *sometimes*. Caching exists for a reason, and I don't want to sacrifice performance. Maybe I can modify the build script so that it only updates the CSS imports when the CSS files have changed... Sounds like a topic for another blogpost!