Hello, have you tried to set the expires meta tag on your pages? Perhaps this will help you. <meta http-equiv="expires" content="0"> This informs the browser to get the page under all circumstances from the webserver and to do no caching.
Regards, Matthias > On Wed, 18 Jul 2001, smokez wrote: > > > Sounds like a caching issue > > either with the browser or a caching sever > > > > which browser are you using? > > > > adam > > > > On Wednesday 18 July 2001 11:27 am, Guenter Millahn wrote: > > > Dear Debian guys, > > > > > > probably this is a FAQ. Apologize in that case. > > > > > > I have a WWW server running (Debian woody on i386, Apache 1.3.20, > > > PHP4, some additional modules) > > > > > > Since some weeks I can see the following behaviour: > > > If a HTML/PHP/whatever source in the Document tree was changed, > > > I can see the changes in a WWW browser much later or after restarting > > > Apache. > > > > > > Does anybody of yo know how to make the changes avail immediately to > > > the browser? Is there possibly a FAQ or a HowTo file? > > > > > > Thank you. > > > Guenter > > > I tried Netscape 4.76 (Solaris 2.6) and Lynx. > Without any caching proxy. > On Netscape, I removed the cache completely. No changes in reload. > > Guenter > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- GMX - Die Kommunikationsplattform im Internet. http://www.gmx.net GMX Tipp: Machen Sie Ihr Hobby zu Geld bei unserem Partner 1&1! http://profiseller.de/info/index.php3?ac=OM.PS.PS003K00596T0409a