.. _install_sandboxes_cache_filter: Cache filter ============ .. TODO(yosrym93): When a documentation is written for a production-ready Cache Filter, link to it through this doc. .. sidebar:: Requirements .. include:: _include/docker-env-setup-link.rst :ref:`curl ` Used to make ``HTTP`` requests. In this example, we demonstrate how HTTP caching can be utilized in Envoy by using the Cache Filter. The setup of this sandbox is based on the setup of the :ref:`Front Proxy sandbox `. All incoming requests are routed via the front Envoy, which acts as a reverse proxy sitting on the edge of the ``envoymesh`` network. Port ``8000`` is exposed by :download:`docker-compose.yaml <_include/cache/docker-compose.yaml>` to handle ``HTTP`` calls to the services. Two backend services are deployed behind the front Envoy, each with a sidecar Envoy. The front Envoy is configured to run the Cache Filter, which stores cacheable responses in an in-memory cache, and serves it to subsequent requests. In this demo, the responses that are served by the deployed services are stored in :download:`responses.yaml <_include/cache/responses.yaml>`. This file is mounted to both services' containers, so any changes made to the stored responses while the services are running should be instantly effective (no need to rebuild or rerun). For the purposes of the demo, a response's date of creation is appended to its body before being served. An Etag is computed for every response for validation purposes, which only depends on the response body in the yaml file (i.e. the appended date is not taken into account). Cached responses can be identified by having an ``age`` header. Validated responses can be identified by having a generation date older than the ``date`` header; as when a response is validated the ``date`` header is updated, while the body stays the same. Validated responses do not have an ``age`` header. Responses served from the backend service have no ``age`` header, and their ``date`` header is the same as their generation date. Step 1: Start all of our containers *********************************** Change to the ``examples/cache`` directory. .. code-block:: console $ pwd envoy/examples/cache $ docker-compose build --pull $ docker-compose up -d $ docker-compose ps Name Command State Ports ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- cache_front-envoy_1 /docker-entrypoint.sh /bin ... Up 10000/tcp, 0.0.0.0:8000->8000/tcp cache_service1_1 /bin/sh -c /usr/local/bin/ ... Up 10000/tcp, 8000/tcp cache_service2_1 /bin/sh -c /usr/local/bin/ ... Up 10000/tcp, 8000/tcp Step 2: Test Envoy's HTTP caching capabilities ********************************************** You can now send a request to both services via the ``front-envoy``. Note that since the two services have different routes, identical requests to different services have different cache entries (i.e. a request sent to service 2 will not be served by a cached response produced by service 1). To send a request: ``curl -i localhost:8000/service//`` ``service_no``: The service to send the request to, 1 or 2. ``response``: The response that is being requested. The responses are found in :download:`responses.yaml <_include/cache/responses.yaml>`. The provided example responses are: - ``valid-for-minute`` This response remains fresh in the cache for a minute. After which, the response gets validated by the backend service before being served from the cache. If found to be updated, the new response is served (and cached). Otherwise, the cached response is served and refreshed. - ``private`` This response is private; it cannot be stored by shared caches (such as proxies). It will always be served from the backend service. - ``no-cache`` This response has to be validated every time before being served. You can change the responses' headers and bodies (or add new ones) while the sandbox is running to experiment. Example responses ----------------- 1. valid-for-minute ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. code-block:: console $ curl -i localhost:8000/service/1/valid-for-minute HTTP/1.1 200 OK content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8 content-length: 103 cache-control: max-age=60 custom-header: any value etag: "172ae25df822c3299cf2248694b4ce23" date: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:20:40 GMT server: envoy x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 11 This response will stay fresh for one minute Response body generated at: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:20:40 GMT Naturally, response ``date`` header is the same time as the generated time. Sending the same request after 30 seconds gives the same exact response with the same generation date, but with an ``age`` header as it was served from cache: .. code-block:: console $ curl -i localhost:8000/service/1/valid-for-minute HTTP/1.1 200 OK content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8 content-length: 103 cache-control: max-age=60 custom-header: any value etag: "172ae25df822c3299cf2248694b4ce23" date: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:20:40 GMT server: envoy x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 11 age: 30 This response will stay fresh for one minute Response body generated at: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:20:40 GMT After 1 minute and 1 second: .. code-block:: console $ curl -i localhost:8000/service/1/valid-for-minute HTTP/1.1 200 OK cache-control: max-age=60 custom-header: any value etag: "172ae25df822c3299cf2248694b4ce23" date: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:21:41 GMT server: envoy x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 8 content-length: 103 content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8 This response will stay fresh for one minute Response body generated at: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:20:40 GMT The same response was served after being validated with the backend service. You can verify this as the response generation time is the same, but the response ``date`` header was updated with the validation response date. Also, no ``age`` header. Every time the response is validated, it stays fresh for another minute. If the response body changes while the cached response is still fresh, the cached response will still be served. The cached response will only be updated when it is no longer fresh. 2. private ^^^^^^^^^^ .. code-block:: console $ curl -i localhost:8000/service/1/private HTTP/1.1 200 OK content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8 content-length: 117 cache-control: private etag: "6bd80b59b2722606abf2b8d83ed2126d" date: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:22:28 GMT server: envoy x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 7 This is a private response, it will not be cached by Envoy Response body generated at: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:22:28 GMT No matter how many times you make this request, you will always receive a new response; new date of generation, new ``date`` header, and no ``age`` header. 3. no-cache ^^^^^^^^^^^ .. code-block:: console $ curl -i localhost:8000/service/1/no-cache HTTP/1.1 200 OK content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8 content-length: 130 cache-control: max-age=0, no-cache etag: "ce39a53bd6bb8abdb2488a5a375397e4" date: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:23:07 GMT server: envoy x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 7 This response can be cached, but it has to be validated on each request Response body generated at: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:23:07 GMT After a few seconds: .. code-block:: console $ curl -i localhost:8000/service/1/no-cache HTTP/1.1 200 OK cache-control: max-age=0, no-cache etag: "ce39a53bd6bb8abdb2488a5a375397e4" date: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:23:12 GMT server: envoy x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 7 content-length: 130 content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8 This response can be cached, but it has to be validated on each request Response body generated at: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:23:07 GMT You will receive a cached response that has the same generation time. However, the ``date`` header will always be updated as this response will always be validated first. Also, no ``age`` header. If you change the response body in the yaml file: .. code-block:: console $ curl -i localhost:8000/service/1/no-cache HTTP/1.1 200 OK content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8 content-length: 133 cache-control: max-age=0, no-cache etag: "f4768af0ac9f6f54f88169a1f3ecc9f3" date: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:24:10 GMT server: envoy x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 7 This response can be cached, but it has to be validated on each request!!! Response body generated at: Fri, 11 Sep 2020 03:24:10 GMT You will receive a new response that's served from the backend service. The new response will be cached for subsequent requests. You can also add new responses to the yaml file with different ``cache-control`` headers and start experimenting! .. seealso:: `MDN Web Docs `_. Learn more about caching and ``cache-control`` on the web.