mateusz / controllerpolicy
SilverStripe module providing a framework for per-controller policies. Includes a caching policy implementation that's more flexible than the Framework's default.
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Type:silverstripe-vendormodule
Requires
- silverstripe/framework: ^4.2
Requires (Dev)
This package is not auto-updated.
Last update: 2022-02-01 12:35:28 UTC
README
Summary
This module is deprecated for usage with SilverStripe 3.7+. The HTTPCacheControl API in SilverStripe Framework provides a more high-level abstraction of caching behaviour.
Overview
This module has been designed to provide the ability to configure response policies that apply per specific Controller.
It comes with a small selection of policies for implementing caching:
CachingPolicy
: rewrite of SilverStripe defaultHTTP::add_cache_headers()
.CustomHeaderPolicy
: allow adding any headers via config system.
An example Page extension PageControlledPolicy is also provided utilising CachingPolicy's ability to customise max-age based on CMS configuration on specific objects.
Installation
Install using Composer:
composer require silverstripe/controllerpolicy ^2
Note: This version supported SilverStripe 4. For a SilverStripe 3 compatible version please see the 1.x release line.
Policies
Simple policy
Let's say we want to apply a caching header of max-age 300 to the HomePage only. This module comes with a
CachingPolicy
which by implementing the ControllerPolicy
interface can be applied to anything derived from
Controller
. This class can also be configured to specify the custom max-age via (injected) properties.
Using this policy is done via your project-specific config.yml. We configure the pseudo-singleton via
Dependency Injection and apply it directly to HomePage_Controller
:
SilverStripe\Core\Injector\Injector: StandardCachingPolicy: class: SilverStripe\ControllerPolicy\Policies\CachingPolicy properties: CacheAge: 300 HomePageController: dependencies: Policies: '%$StandardCachingPolicy'
Every policy will set headers on top of the default framework's HTTP::add_cache_headers
, which is exactly what we
want. This allows us to for example customise the Vary
headers per policy, which were previously hardcoded. It also
allows us to configure these settings on a per-controller basis, rather than a global default.
Ignoring domains
If you wish to exclude some domains from the policies completely, you can do the following:
SilverStripe\ControllerPolicy\ControllerPolicyMiddleware: ignore_regex_domains: - '/.*\.uat.server.com$/'
This could be useful for example if you wish to disable caching on test servers, or if you are doing aggressive caching and want your editors to see changed resources immediately.
Vary headers
CachingPolicy
also allows customisation of Vary
headers through the config system:
SilverStripe\Core\Injector\Injector: StandardCachingPolicy: class: SilverStripe\ControllerPolicy\Policies\CachingPolicy properties: CacheAge: 300 Vary: 'Cookie, X-Forwarded-Protocol, Accept-Language'
Any URL which content depends on an impulse from the visitor should use Vary header to encode this dependency, otherwise caches might serve wrong content to the wrong user (possibly even confidential data!).
Here is a table of some more obvious Vary
headers. CachingPolicy
uses a relatively safe combination of
Cookie, X-Forwarded-Protocol
. Keep in mind the more of these you specify, the more partitioned the cache, which
will nullify potential gains. Use as few as you are confident with.
Vary on | Description | Cache partitioning impact |
---|---|---|
Accept-Encoding | Vary on content deflate method - Apache will deliver different content depending on accepted encoding. Automatically added by Apache mod_header. | low |
Cookie | Vary on user session. Pretty much partitions the responses into generic and personalised. Note that for this to work well, the cache needs to purge frontend-only cookies such as __utma from the requests. A sensible addition. | low |
X-Forwarded-Protocol | Vary on protocol such as http or https - use when the cache is behind a reverse-proxy, as there is often a difference in "BaseURL" which is not reflected in the URL the cache sees. A sensible addition. | low |
X-Forwarded-Proto | A variation on X-Forwarded-Protocol, choose one appropriate to your reverse-proxy. | low |
Accept | Vary on the response format. Some URLs, especially the API endpoints, can produce different output depending on what the user accepts: i.e. JSON vs. XML. Avoid if possible, and instead encode the content type in the URL. | medium |
Accept-Language | Vary on the accepted language, if you are providing different language content depending on the user browser's setting. Avoid if possible, and instead encode the language in the URL. | medium |
User-Agent | Vary on the user's device. There is so many user strings around this will effectively disable your cache. Avoid at all costs, and instead use responsive themes. | extreme |
Overriding policies
If you apply a policy to a certain Controller
it will apply to all inheriting controllers too. For example if we have
FooPageController extends PageController
then the PageController
policy will also affect the FooPageController
.
You can break that chain easily by applying a policy to the inheriting controller as long as you are not using arrays for configuration (which you ordinarily wouldn't be - but see the "Complex policies" chapter below):
FooPageController: dependencies: Policies: null
In SilverStripe 4 the config system allows you to set falsey values, which you can utilise to unset previously defined policies for a controller, or globally. This is useful for example for GET-based multi-step forms (via the silverstripe-multiform) module, where steps are traversed via GET requests, and URIs don't differ - hence preventing your from actually progressing through the form.
Note that you can also use any other policy to override the existing one - you don't only have to unset it.
PageControlledPolicy
Here is an example of how to implement CMS capability to override the max-age per specific page. In your config file put the following statements:
SilverStripe\Core\Injector\Injector: GeneralCachingPolicy: class: SilverStripe\ControllerPolicy\Policies\CachingPolicy properties: CacheAge: 900 PageController: dependencies: Policies: '%$GeneralCachingPolicy' Page: extensions: - SilverStripe\ControllerPolicy\PageControlledPolicy
Here, applying the PageControlledPolicy
extension to the Page
results in a new "MaxAge" field being written into the
DB, and a new tab available ("Caching") which lets the an administrative user tweak the cache max-age header
(denominated in minutes).
Complex policies via array-merging
This example illustrates the usage of array-merging capability of the config system, which will enable you to simulate policy inheritance that will reflect your class diagram.
In this example we want to configure a global setting consisting of two policies, one setting the max-age to 300, and second to configure custom header. Then we want to add more specific policy for the home page max-age, while keeping the custom header. Here is how to achieve this using the config system:
SilverStripe\Core\Injector\Injector: ShortCachingPolicy: class: SilverStripe\ControllerPolicy\Policies\CachingPolicy properties: CacheAge: 300 LongCachingPolicy: class: SilverStripe\ControllerPolicy\Policies\CachingPolicy properties: CacheAge: 3600 CustomPolicy: class: SilverStripe\ControllerPolicy\Policies\CustomHeaderPolicy properties: Headers: Custom-Header: "Hello" HomePageController: dependencies: Policies: LongCachingPolicy: '%$LongCachingPolicy' PageController: dependencies: Policies: ShortCachingPolicy: '%$ShortCachingPolicy' CustomPolicy: '%$CustomPolicy'
Outcome of the array merging for the home page will be as follows:
- LongCachingPolicy
- ShortCachingPolicy
- CustomPolicy
We handle this array in reverse order, meaning that by default the top policy (most specific Controller) will override the others. This does not mean many Controller policies will trigger - rather, one Controller will apply a merged set.
Caution: you can either use the array syntax, or value syntax. Choose what's easier. If using an array then we recommend giving each value a key as well, which will allow you to unset previously defined values in other config blocks, which would otherwise not be possible.
Developer notes
For advanced usage of policies (e.g. returning a 304 header early) you can look at the
ControllerPolicyMiddleware::process
method. In such a situation, your custom policy could replace the HTTPResponse
$response
argument from its applyToResponse
method with a new HTTPResponse with a 304 code.
Another thing is that the policies will be applied in the Controller order of initialisation, so if multiple
Controllers are invoked the latter will override the former. HOWEVER this is very unlikely and has nothing to do with
the inheritance of classes. This relates to how the Controller stack is invoked in SilverStripe. The extension point in
ControllerPolicyApplicator
has been chosen such that the ModelAsController
and RootURLController
do not trigger
application of policies, and it is expected that only one controller will trigger the policy.