Ok, even if you aren't using express, what essentially needed is to set the nocache headers. As @kornel stated, what you want is not to deactivate the cache, but to deactivate the history buffer. This is causing a problem to my login system (users not logged in can open old cached pages of logged in users).
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To gain full voting privileges, By default, my browser caches webpages of my expressjs app. I'm adding the headers in a reusable middleware, otherwise you can set those headers in any way.
I have build a docker image from a docker file using the below command.
I looked it up and as it turns out, their flush. If your class or action didn't have nocache when it was rendered in your browser and you want to check it's working, remember that after compiling the changes you need to do. When i am trying to rebuild it with the same command,. Alright, this is due to the pain that godaddy gives me by implementing their own caching in a managed wordpress hosting.
It tells browsers and caches that the response. Different browsers have their own subtle ways to disable the history buffer. It was intended as a privacy measure:
