Firefox showing wrong favicon first time [duplicate] - html
I have a Grails application running locally using its own tomcat and I have just changed the favicon for a new one. Problem is that I can not see it in any browser. The old favicon shows up or I get no favicon at all, but not my new one. I do not think this is a Grails issue per se, more an issue with favicons.
What is supposed to happen with favicons? How are they supposed to work? I have numerous bookmarks in my browser which have the wrong icons and they never seem to get refreshed. How do I force the server/browser to stop caching them? It seems pretty silly to always cache them given they are normally only 16x16. Why not just upload them with every visit to the page? It is not exactly a huge overhead.
To refresh your site's favicon you can force browsers to download a new version using the link tag and a query string on your filename.
This is especially helpful in production environments to make sure your users get the update.
<link rel="icon" href="http://www.yoursite.com/favicon.ico?v=2" />
Adapted from lineofbird's answer beloew, you can do the following:
Go directly to the favicon url in the address bar by typing in it's address e.g.
www.yoursite.com/favicon.ico
www.yoursite.com/apple-touch-icon.png
etc.
Navigate to the url by pressing Enter
Refresh with Ctrl+F5
Restart your browser (e.g. Chrome, Firefox)
This answer has not been given yet so I thought I'd post it. I looked all around the web, and didn't find a good answer for testing favicons in local development.
In current version of chrome (on OSX) if you do the following you will get an instant favicon refresh:
Hover over tab
Right Click
Select reload
Your favicon should now be refreshed
This is the easiest way I've found to refresh the favicon locally.
By destroying the file your browser uses to store old favicons, you can force new ones to be loaded.
Close your browser. Make sure there are no longer browser processes running (e.g. check Task Manager for chrome.exe or firefox.exe).
Navigate to where your browser stores user files:
For Chrome, go to the Chrome data directory.
For Firefox, go to the Firefox profile folder.
Delete the favicon cache.
For Chrome, remove Favicons and Favicons-journal
For Firefox, remove favicons.sqlite
This will almost definitely work. If not:
Possibility 1: An update to your browser has changed how the favicon cache works. Please edit this answer with new instructions.
Possibility 2: Your favicon problem has nothing to do with overaggressive caching. It may instead be a resource-loading problem – using Developer Tools, make sure the new favicon is downloading properly.
Rename the favicon file and add an html header with the new name, such as:
<link rel="SHORTCUT ICON" href="http://www.yoursite.com/favicon2.ico" />
If you use PHP you could also use the MD5-Hash of the favicon as a query-string:
<link rel="shortcut icon" href="favicon.ico?v=<?php echo md5_file('favicon.ico') ?>" />
This way the Favicon will always refresh when it has been changed.
As pointed out in the comments you can also use the last modified date instead of the MD5-Hash to achieve the same thing and save a bit on server performance:
<link rel="shortcut icon" href="favicon.ico?v=<?php echo filemtime('favicon.ico') ?>" />
In Chrome on Mac OS X one can remove file with favicon cache
${user.home}/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Favicons
Depending on the browser they are handled differently, but typically I find that going to the default page of the site, and doing a hard refresh. CTRL + F5 (or ⌘ Command + SHIFT + F5 on macOS), will typically get it to update.
Well, overhead is overhead, but yes, not too big.
Also, browsers are sometimes "greedy" about cached files. You could clear cache and/or restart your browser and may see the change. If that fails though...
My cheapo solution is to:
Visit your file at http://example.com/favicon.ico in your browser.
Delete the favicon.ico from your webroot.
Visit http://example.com/favicon.ico again in a browser, verify it's missing.
Upload new one to your webroot.
Visit http://example.com/favicon.ico again in a browser, verify it's the new one.
If that sequence doesn't work, then something else is going on.
ON MAC:
⌘ + Shift-R or hold down Ctrl and click the reload button in the browser.
For Internet Explorer, there is another solution:
Open internet explorer.
Click menu > tools > internet options.
Click general > temporary internet files > "settings" button.
Click "view files" button.
Find your old favicon.ico file and delete it.
Restart browser(internet explorer).
More than likely a web browser issue. You will have to delete your cache from your browser, close your browser and reopen it. That should fix it.
I don't believe your favicons will get refreshed on your favorites until you revisit that page, and assuming that you had previously cleared your browsers cache.
Your web browser will not go out to the internet to check for a new favicon on its own... thank goodness.
Try Opening In a New Tab
I tried many of the things above (resetting cache, refreshing, using the link tag, etc), I even checked my .htaccess file and reset the ExpiresByType variable.
But this is what finally worked for me in both Chrome (25.0.x) and Safari (6.0.1):
Flushing cache
Hard-linking the favicon with the <link> tag
Navigating to mysite.com/favicon.ico
Opening mysite.com in a new tab
(Up until step 3, refreshing in the same tab kept reproducing the old icon.)
Chrome Version: 68.0.3440.106
Just restart Chrome (in your address bar):
chrome://restart
For Chrome on macOS, if you don't want to delete the entire Chrome favicon database as suggested already here, you can delete only the conflicting icons:
Quit Chrome
Load the favicons database (using sqlite here):
sqlite3 ~/Library/Application\ Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Favicons
Search for the file that is causing issues
select * from favicons where url = 'http://mysite.dev/favicon.ico';
If you are happy with the output:
delete from favicons where url = 'http://mysite.dev/favicon.ico';
Alternatively, you can search for a pattern that you can reuse to delete multiple entries:
Search for multiple files that are causing issues
select * from favicons where url like 'http://mysite.dev%';
And again if you are happy with what this returns:
delete from favicons where url like 'http://mysite.dev%';
Type .exit and hit return to quit sqlite
Restart Chrome
When you request the favicon from Google, you can take a look at the response headers.
Last-Modified: Fri, 09 Jan 2009 16:35:02 GMT
Date: Thu, 01 Dec 2010 00:00:01 GMT
Expires: Fri, 01 Dec 2011 00:00:01 GMT
Cache-Control: public, max-age=31536000
Age: 7
If you put an "Expires: " header on the response, client browsers will re-request the icon after that timestamp. While doing active development, you could set the expires timestamp to a second or two in the future, and always have it fetch this, although that's a poor longterm plan.
Chrome's favicon support is buggy - disregard this answer
I wrote this answer under the impression that this is what it took to refresh favicons in Google Chrome. However, it turns out that this only works for the first five minutes or so, until the icon gets irretrievably lost in Chrome's history synchronization.
Original answer
You don't have to clear your cache, restart your browser, or rewrite your HTML - you just need to change the icon's URL, once, so that the browser will forget the previously-cached icon.
Assuming that you've defined your icon via <link> elements in your page's <head>, you can do that by running this standard-JS one-liner in the console:
[].slice.call(document.querySelectorAll('head>link[rel$="icon"]')).map(function(ln){ln.href+='?v=2'});
For a more advanced implementation of this that can automatically do this for end users in production, see freshicon.js.
I recently restored my bookmarks and was looking for a way to restore the FavIcons without visiting each page. My search brought me to this thread.
For those in a similar circumstance merely download the FAVICON RELOADER addon. Once installed you will find the "reload favorite icons" command in your BOOKMARKS dropdown menu.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/faviconreloader/?src=api
If you are using PHP .. then you can also use this line.
<link rel="shortcut icon" href="http://www.yoursite.com/favicon.ico?v=<?php echo time() ?>" />
It will refresh your favicon on each page load.
If you are just interested in debugging it to make sure it has changed, you can just add a dummy entry to your /etc/hosts file and hit the new URL. That favicon wouldnt be cached already and you can make sure you new one is working.
Short of changing the name of the favicon, there is no way you can force your users to get a new copy
This is a workaround for the chrome bug: change the rel attribute to stylesheet! Keep the original link though. Works like a charm:
I came up with this workaround because we also have a requirement to be able to update customer's sites / production code and I didn't find any of the other solutions to work.
This works for Chrome:
on Mac: delete file
${user.home}/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Favicons
on Windows: delete files
C:\Users[username]\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Favicons
C:\Users[username]\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Favicons-journal
source
I know this is a really old question but it is also one that is still relevant, though these days applies only to mozilla. (I have no idea what explorer does coz we don't code for non standard browsers).
Chrome is well behaved if one includes an icon tag in the header.
Although mozilla are well aware of the issue, as usual, they never fix the annoying small stuff. Even 6 years later.
So, there are two ways of forcing an icon refresh with firefox.
Have all your clients uninstall firefox. Then re-install.
Manually type just the domain in the url bar - do not use http or www
just the domain (mydomain.com).
This assumes of course that your ns records include resolution for the domain name only.
Simple,
1: I don't want to fiddle around with codes (ps my site builder doesn't use codes, it uses "upload file" button and it does it itself)
2: I tried the CTRL+F5 and it doesn't work for me so....
I HAVE A SOLUTION:
IE: Clear All browser history and cookies by going to the settings cog O
Chrome: Go to the menu in the top right corner below the X that looks like a = , then go to settings, history, CLEAR BROWSING DATA and check all of the boxes that apply (I did history, cookies and empty the catche from the beginning of time)
Just change this filename='favicon1.ico'
Here's how I managed it with a simply animated favicon and FireFox 3.6.13 (beta version) It will probably work for other versions of FireFox as well, let me know if it doesn't.
It's basically artlung's solution, but addressing the .gif file as well:
I opened by FTP program, downloaded my favicon.ico AND favicon.gif files,
then DELETED them from my server's files.
Then I opened them in my browser as artlung suggested:
http://mysite.com/favicon.ico AND http://mysite.com/favicon.gif Once those addresses loaded and displayed 404 error pages ("page not found")
I THEN uploaded both files back onto my server, and PRESTO - the correct icons were instantly displayed.
Also make sure you put the full image URL not just its relative path:
http://www.example.com/images/favicon.ico
And not:
images/favicon.ico
Use query string at the end of the file path. Query string variable value must be different with every build.
if previous build is:
<link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico?v=v1" />
OR
<link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico?v=stringA" />
then next build should be:
<link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico?v=v2" />
OR
<link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico?v=stringB" />
Close all Google Chrome windows
Adding one more answer that I do not see here. I tried flushing my Google Chrome cache, reloading the tab, refreshing the tab, opening in a new tab, and even opening a new window. Nothing worked for me. What did finally work for me was to close all Google Chrome windows (if you're like me, you probably have 3+ windows with a bunch of tabs, and maybe even have more windows/tabs in another desktop, don't forget those!). Once all of your windows are closed, then try opening a fresh new window and reloading your site.
Hope this helps someone!
Bonus tip: If you'd like to get all your windows back, you can press "Ctrl + Shift + Up Arrow + T" to get your windows and tabs back.
If the problem continues despite of applying some steps above:
try to restart the IIS Server.
Related
I was creating a website, but my favicon isn't working [duplicate]
I have a Grails application running locally using its own tomcat and I have just changed the favicon for a new one. Problem is that I can not see it in any browser. The old favicon shows up or I get no favicon at all, but not my new one. I do not think this is a Grails issue per se, more an issue with favicons. What is supposed to happen with favicons? How are they supposed to work? I have numerous bookmarks in my browser which have the wrong icons and they never seem to get refreshed. How do I force the server/browser to stop caching them? It seems pretty silly to always cache them given they are normally only 16x16. Why not just upload them with every visit to the page? It is not exactly a huge overhead.
To refresh your site's favicon you can force browsers to download a new version using the link tag and a query string on your filename. This is especially helpful in production environments to make sure your users get the update. <link rel="icon" href="http://www.yoursite.com/favicon.ico?v=2" />
Adapted from lineofbird's answer beloew, you can do the following: Go directly to the favicon url in the address bar by typing in it's address e.g. www.yoursite.com/favicon.ico www.yoursite.com/apple-touch-icon.png etc. Navigate to the url by pressing Enter Refresh with Ctrl+F5 Restart your browser (e.g. Chrome, Firefox)
This answer has not been given yet so I thought I'd post it. I looked all around the web, and didn't find a good answer for testing favicons in local development. In current version of chrome (on OSX) if you do the following you will get an instant favicon refresh: Hover over tab Right Click Select reload Your favicon should now be refreshed This is the easiest way I've found to refresh the favicon locally.
By destroying the file your browser uses to store old favicons, you can force new ones to be loaded. Close your browser. Make sure there are no longer browser processes running (e.g. check Task Manager for chrome.exe or firefox.exe). Navigate to where your browser stores user files: For Chrome, go to the Chrome data directory. For Firefox, go to the Firefox profile folder. Delete the favicon cache. For Chrome, remove Favicons and Favicons-journal For Firefox, remove favicons.sqlite This will almost definitely work. If not: Possibility 1: An update to your browser has changed how the favicon cache works. Please edit this answer with new instructions. Possibility 2: Your favicon problem has nothing to do with overaggressive caching. It may instead be a resource-loading problem – using Developer Tools, make sure the new favicon is downloading properly.
Rename the favicon file and add an html header with the new name, such as: <link rel="SHORTCUT ICON" href="http://www.yoursite.com/favicon2.ico" />
If you use PHP you could also use the MD5-Hash of the favicon as a query-string: <link rel="shortcut icon" href="favicon.ico?v=<?php echo md5_file('favicon.ico') ?>" /> This way the Favicon will always refresh when it has been changed. As pointed out in the comments you can also use the last modified date instead of the MD5-Hash to achieve the same thing and save a bit on server performance: <link rel="shortcut icon" href="favicon.ico?v=<?php echo filemtime('favicon.ico') ?>" />
In Chrome on Mac OS X one can remove file with favicon cache ${user.home}/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Favicons
Depending on the browser they are handled differently, but typically I find that going to the default page of the site, and doing a hard refresh. CTRL + F5 (or ⌘ Command + SHIFT + F5 on macOS), will typically get it to update.
Well, overhead is overhead, but yes, not too big. Also, browsers are sometimes "greedy" about cached files. You could clear cache and/or restart your browser and may see the change. If that fails though... My cheapo solution is to: Visit your file at http://example.com/favicon.ico in your browser. Delete the favicon.ico from your webroot. Visit http://example.com/favicon.ico again in a browser, verify it's missing. Upload new one to your webroot. Visit http://example.com/favicon.ico again in a browser, verify it's the new one. If that sequence doesn't work, then something else is going on.
ON MAC: ⌘ + Shift-R or hold down Ctrl and click the reload button in the browser.
For Internet Explorer, there is another solution: Open internet explorer. Click menu > tools > internet options. Click general > temporary internet files > "settings" button. Click "view files" button. Find your old favicon.ico file and delete it. Restart browser(internet explorer).
More than likely a web browser issue. You will have to delete your cache from your browser, close your browser and reopen it. That should fix it. I don't believe your favicons will get refreshed on your favorites until you revisit that page, and assuming that you had previously cleared your browsers cache. Your web browser will not go out to the internet to check for a new favicon on its own... thank goodness.
Try Opening In a New Tab I tried many of the things above (resetting cache, refreshing, using the link tag, etc), I even checked my .htaccess file and reset the ExpiresByType variable. But this is what finally worked for me in both Chrome (25.0.x) and Safari (6.0.1): Flushing cache Hard-linking the favicon with the <link> tag Navigating to mysite.com/favicon.ico Opening mysite.com in a new tab (Up until step 3, refreshing in the same tab kept reproducing the old icon.)
Chrome Version: 68.0.3440.106 Just restart Chrome (in your address bar): chrome://restart
For Chrome on macOS, if you don't want to delete the entire Chrome favicon database as suggested already here, you can delete only the conflicting icons: Quit Chrome Load the favicons database (using sqlite here): sqlite3 ~/Library/Application\ Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Favicons Search for the file that is causing issues select * from favicons where url = 'http://mysite.dev/favicon.ico'; If you are happy with the output: delete from favicons where url = 'http://mysite.dev/favicon.ico'; Alternatively, you can search for a pattern that you can reuse to delete multiple entries: Search for multiple files that are causing issues select * from favicons where url like 'http://mysite.dev%'; And again if you are happy with what this returns: delete from favicons where url like 'http://mysite.dev%'; Type .exit and hit return to quit sqlite Restart Chrome
When you request the favicon from Google, you can take a look at the response headers. Last-Modified: Fri, 09 Jan 2009 16:35:02 GMT Date: Thu, 01 Dec 2010 00:00:01 GMT Expires: Fri, 01 Dec 2011 00:00:01 GMT Cache-Control: public, max-age=31536000 Age: 7 If you put an "Expires: " header on the response, client browsers will re-request the icon after that timestamp. While doing active development, you could set the expires timestamp to a second or two in the future, and always have it fetch this, although that's a poor longterm plan.
Chrome's favicon support is buggy - disregard this answer I wrote this answer under the impression that this is what it took to refresh favicons in Google Chrome. However, it turns out that this only works for the first five minutes or so, until the icon gets irretrievably lost in Chrome's history synchronization. Original answer You don't have to clear your cache, restart your browser, or rewrite your HTML - you just need to change the icon's URL, once, so that the browser will forget the previously-cached icon. Assuming that you've defined your icon via <link> elements in your page's <head>, you can do that by running this standard-JS one-liner in the console: [].slice.call(document.querySelectorAll('head>link[rel$="icon"]')).map(function(ln){ln.href+='?v=2'}); For a more advanced implementation of this that can automatically do this for end users in production, see freshicon.js.
I recently restored my bookmarks and was looking for a way to restore the FavIcons without visiting each page. My search brought me to this thread. For those in a similar circumstance merely download the FAVICON RELOADER addon. Once installed you will find the "reload favorite icons" command in your BOOKMARKS dropdown menu. https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/faviconreloader/?src=api
If you are using PHP .. then you can also use this line. <link rel="shortcut icon" href="http://www.yoursite.com/favicon.ico?v=<?php echo time() ?>" /> It will refresh your favicon on each page load.
If you are just interested in debugging it to make sure it has changed, you can just add a dummy entry to your /etc/hosts file and hit the new URL. That favicon wouldnt be cached already and you can make sure you new one is working. Short of changing the name of the favicon, there is no way you can force your users to get a new copy
This is a workaround for the chrome bug: change the rel attribute to stylesheet! Keep the original link though. Works like a charm: I came up with this workaround because we also have a requirement to be able to update customer's sites / production code and I didn't find any of the other solutions to work.
This works for Chrome: on Mac: delete file ${user.home}/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Favicons on Windows: delete files C:\Users[username]\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Favicons C:\Users[username]\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Favicons-journal source
I know this is a really old question but it is also one that is still relevant, though these days applies only to mozilla. (I have no idea what explorer does coz we don't code for non standard browsers). Chrome is well behaved if one includes an icon tag in the header. Although mozilla are well aware of the issue, as usual, they never fix the annoying small stuff. Even 6 years later. So, there are two ways of forcing an icon refresh with firefox. Have all your clients uninstall firefox. Then re-install. Manually type just the domain in the url bar - do not use http or www just the domain (mydomain.com). This assumes of course that your ns records include resolution for the domain name only.
Simple, 1: I don't want to fiddle around with codes (ps my site builder doesn't use codes, it uses "upload file" button and it does it itself) 2: I tried the CTRL+F5 and it doesn't work for me so.... I HAVE A SOLUTION: IE: Clear All browser history and cookies by going to the settings cog O Chrome: Go to the menu in the top right corner below the X that looks like a = , then go to settings, history, CLEAR BROWSING DATA and check all of the boxes that apply (I did history, cookies and empty the catche from the beginning of time)
Just change this filename='favicon1.ico'
Here's how I managed it with a simply animated favicon and FireFox 3.6.13 (beta version) It will probably work for other versions of FireFox as well, let me know if it doesn't. It's basically artlung's solution, but addressing the .gif file as well: I opened by FTP program, downloaded my favicon.ico AND favicon.gif files, then DELETED them from my server's files. Then I opened them in my browser as artlung suggested: http://mysite.com/favicon.ico AND http://mysite.com/favicon.gif Once those addresses loaded and displayed 404 error pages ("page not found") I THEN uploaded both files back onto my server, and PRESTO - the correct icons were instantly displayed.
Also make sure you put the full image URL not just its relative path: http://www.example.com/images/favicon.ico And not: images/favicon.ico
Use query string at the end of the file path. Query string variable value must be different with every build. if previous build is: <link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico?v=v1" /> OR <link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico?v=stringA" /> then next build should be: <link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico?v=v2" /> OR <link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico?v=stringB" />
Close all Google Chrome windows Adding one more answer that I do not see here. I tried flushing my Google Chrome cache, reloading the tab, refreshing the tab, opening in a new tab, and even opening a new window. Nothing worked for me. What did finally work for me was to close all Google Chrome windows (if you're like me, you probably have 3+ windows with a bunch of tabs, and maybe even have more windows/tabs in another desktop, don't forget those!). Once all of your windows are closed, then try opening a fresh new window and reloading your site. Hope this helps someone! Bonus tip: If you'd like to get all your windows back, you can press "Ctrl + Shift + Up Arrow + T" to get your windows and tabs back.
If the problem continues despite of applying some steps above: try to restart the IIS Server.
Removing "Default" Favicon
I have a localhost instance I run on a given port, and when developing a site for another client, my previous clients favicon still shows in the tab even though the client has no favicon. How do I remove my previous client's favicon from the browser/server? It does it Safari, Chrome (OS X), and Firefox. I've tried the force refresh (Mac equivalent of Ctrl + F5) to no avail. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks.
Clear the browser's cache: Ctrl-Shift-Delete (Cmd-Shift-Delete), select what to clear, and for what period of time. Because the new website has the same host as the old one, browser may still think you're on the previous site and display your cached icon. Or just add a favicon to the new site.
You can force a browser to download new instances of similarly named files by adding a version to them in the form of a query parameter, and updating the version as needed throughout development. <link rel="icon" href="localhost:4200/favicon.ico?version=2" /> Other than that, closing the tab, and in some cases restarting the browser works if force refreshing the cache didn't.
These are typically stored in with the temp internet files on your server. Clearing the history, cookies, and meta-data should take care of this.
Cleared cache and Chrome won't stop using old CSS
I've been developing a website locally and have uploaded the website a couple of times to my server on Siteground for testing. With this newest upload I cannot for the life of me get chrome to stop using my old css file. I have completely cleared the cache many, many times. I have removed the CSS files from my server completely and done the same, so the site should be rendering free of any and all CSS. I have double-checked via cPanel file management to make sure there are no CSS files. It renders as it should (with no CSS) in every other browser but still not in Chrome! I imagine this is a very simple problem with a simple answer and I am just not seeing it. Here's the website. What it looks like in Chrome: What it looks like in every other browser:
Try CTRL + SHIFT + R instead (shortcut key for Hard Reload in Chrome). You can also try add ?ver=anynumber at the end of your linked css to force browsers to reload it: <link rel="stylesheet" href="assets/css/styles.css?ver=100">
If you're using Windows then try Ctrl+F5 or Shift+F5 keys. On Mac OS X try holding both the ⌘ Cmd and ⇧ Shift keys and press the R key.
When you click Ctrl-Shift-Del in Chrome it opens the "Clear browsing data" -page. You can and should check the check-box "Browsing history". However note that above that you have the setting for "Time Range". Choose "All time". That seems to NOT be the default. If you don't choose "All time" then perhaps counter-intuitively older resources stay in the cache whereas only ones cached during last hour or so may be removed.
Chrome keeps loading a old cache of my website
I am experiencing this weird issue where my Chrome browser keeps loading a old version of my website whose code doesn't even exist on my server any more. I assume it's a typical cache issue. I tried to clean the browser cache, use igcognito mode, and clean DNS cache. The old cached page is still being loaded. This issue seems to have been discussing on this google group for three years but there is still no solutions. https://productforums.google.com/forum/#!topic/chrome/xR-6YAkcASQ Using firefox or any other web browsers works perfectly. It doesn't just happen to me. All my coworkers experience the same issue on my website.
<?php Header("Cache-Control: max-age=3000, must-revalidate"); ?> You can implement a PHP script that must be the first line of code in your index file . It is an http header typically issued by web servers. You can also rename the resource that is considered "stale". This tutorial will give you more details. https://www.mnot.net/cache_docs/
I'm not sure if I understand your problem correctly, but I was experiencing something similar and instead of clearing the cache I disabled it by doing this: Open chrome and then go to your website Press Command + Option + C(Mac) Now that you've opened chrome's DevTools, go to the main menu where it says: Elements Console Sources ... Click on the menu element that says Network Make sure that the "Disable Cache" checkbox is checked Then reload the page without closing the DevTools This worked for me. Let me know if it worked for you :)
A short term fix to view the new version of your site would normally be to clear out the cache and reload, for some reason this doesn't always work on Chrome. This short term solution is not going to fix the problem for every user that's on your site though, it will just allow you to see the new version of your site. Adding version numbers to CSS and JS files will allow you and every other user, to see the most recent version of your site. A version number will force any browser not to load from the a user's personal computer cache, and instead load the actual files on the server, if the version number varies from the one in the user's cache. So if you have these files on your server: ExJS.js ExCSS.css and change them to: ExJS.js?v=1.01 ExCSS.css?v=1.01 the new version of these files will load in any browser. Normally, a browser will always load the HTML file from the server, but there are some HTML meta tags you can use to make sure that the most recent HTML version will load for any user: <meta http-equiv="Cache-Control" content="no-cache, no-store, must-revalidate" /> <meta http-equiv="Pragma" content="no-cache" /> <meta http-equiv="Expires" content="0" /> There are also ways to make sure that files in other languages always load the most recent version as well, which is discussed on this post: How to add version number to HTML file (not only to css and js files)
You can press on Inspect, then Network and check Disable cache.
change the name of images and make the necessary image name changes in html file.. found this quick fix for my website
I ran into the same issue, and I also tried to disable caching on my JSP pages <% response.setHeader("Cache-Control","no-cache"); response.setHeader("Pragma","no-cache"); response.setDateHeader ("Expires", 0); %> But it didn't help. This is a known issue with google chrome and chromium browsers, even though you clear cache and cookie. However it may or may not happen for most of the users. Also this has been unresolved till the date since last 9-10 years. Hence for testing purposes I would highly recommend to use Mozilla Firefox or Opera. However it does sounds that your application is limited to certain browsers for best experience, and may not sound convincing to Business/End users. But having said that, this caching issue may or may not happen to most of us.
You should be able to clear the problem by resetting Chrome. This is the only way I found to clear this condition - after tearing my hair out for half a day. Prior to finding this, I tried clearing the cache, deleting the contents of the various cache directories etc. in vain. [As of today May 3 2021] You can do this by gong to 'Settings > Advanced > Reset and clean up > Restore settings to their original defaults'. Note that this will not remove any bookmarks but will log you out of all accounts you are signed into.
Adding CNAME Will help also if you always run site without www, try with www.example.com will work.
I came across this issue developing locally, and tried the following things: Clearing Cache + generally ALL files in Chrome Setting the Cache-Control Header like Eli Duhon mentioned. Setting the Cache Control Header in multiple other ways. And the only thing that fixed the problem for me was to basically re-start my docker containers on which the app was running. so I did this: docker-compose down And then docker-compose up and everything was updated after that. HOWEVER, if you have changes again, they are still not updated... So this is certainly not a fix to this problem, as I dont even know what causes this behaviour in the first place, but I assume it has to do something with hot reloading and/or Docker but that was the only thing that did the trick for me so I thought I would mention it here...
I had this problem moving a Wordpress site to new hosting where the URL redirects to .../wp, which hadn't been the case before. Chrome was helpfully presenting a directory listing showing the file dates from the old server, despite the DNS having updated fully a week ago. So it was obviously demonstrating the problem discussed here. I added an index.html file with just the following in it: <meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0; URL='http://my-wp-site.com/wp'"/> which fixed the problem straight away, including on Chrome browsers that had not had their cache cleared and that had no knowledge of any Google account of mine. I don't know why this worked, however, given all the problems people have listed above.
you have two options a) consider fingerprint the stale resources like <script src="js/app-4829382839238882882bb3442bbbbdhh3kh3.js" type="text/javascript"></script> b) Add cache control headers such as Cache-Control, Expires on your webserver. This is a good read on browser caching
Firefox doesn't show favicon
I created favicon.ico file and declared it in my HTML head tag: <link type="image/x-icon" href="favicon.ico" rel="icon" /> <link type="image/x-icon" href="favicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" /> IE 8 and Opera handle it great but FireFox does not even try to load it (as I see from my Fiddler debug proxy). I've tried many different type (image/ico etc.) and href params but no luck. What did I miss?
Like most things in the browser, favicons (or lack thereof) are common candidates for caching. Try clearing your browser cache. In Mozilla Firefox, the keyboard shortcut to "Reload (override cache)" is Ctrl + F5 OR Ctrl + Shift + R
Firefox has separate cache for favicon and this does not work properly. The favicon is not updated easily in firefox. This is a small issue but troubles many of us for long time. The solution is to clear the favicon cache so that the favicon is update. There are many solutions you can find if you go through the internet or stackoverflow. Most of the solution imvolves deleteing the favicon cache manually or using some plugins. Some saying deleting the file from temp internet files. But there is one really simple and easy way to fix the problem. Type in www.yoursite.com/favicon.ico (or www.yoursite.com/apple-touch-icon.png, etc.) CTRL + F5 or CTRL + R This will immediately update the favicon. This solution was originally posted by 'alex' at this link: How do I force a favicon refresh
That's strange, because I just copy/pasted your code to a blank document, opened with firefox and some random image I renamed to favicon.ico loaded up as the favicon. Maybe try this? http://help.godaddy.com/article/4145
My problem was that I had another favicon.ico in a web root directory. If You have a favicon in template directory "/template/favicon.ico" and another one in "/favicon.ico" firefox will use the favicon from root direcory even though you've used a link for favicon in template folder. Solution is delete the favicon in root directory. My current version of firefox is 58.0b6 (Quantum).
So just had an issue with favicons not showing in Firefox v70.0.1. Now this will probably only be an issue for a very few people and most likely only if you have modified the about:config settings in FF This issue for me was the setting privacy.resistfingerprinting was set to true on some sites this will block favicons. The other issue I noticed and what lead me to find out what was causing the issue was using dropzone.js on a site I was creating the uploaded images had a blank preview. The previews are base64 encoded and were being blocked by this. Like I said most likely wont be an issue for most but wanted to post this somewhere so it may help others that may be facing a similar issue as I did. See more here: https://wiki.mozilla.org/Security/Fingerprinting And Here: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1452391
I am not much of a programmer but I had a similar problem and here is the simple thing that finally worked for me... I admin several simple websites but Firefox refused to load the favicon of one in particular site. I looked online, tried everything I was able to understand. Nothing worked. The code was exactly the same (copied in fact) from the other websites whose icons worked well. Eventually it dawned on me that maybe Firefox did not like the path I used to get there. This site was a forwarded URL being hosted on my own domain. (i.e. personal domain is myplace.ca and the favicon that would not load was part of registered URL something.com which was actually located at myplace.ca/PutItHere/) If I used the registered URL (something.com) no favicon. If I use the real path in the browser, suddenly favicon! All I had to do was bookmark the absolute path rather than the registered domain!
I also found, that if you reference the full URL path, you may need to reference the URL WITH www. in it, otherwise it may not load.
Here it's in 2017. Firefox didn't pick up my favicon called "favicon-32x32.png", while Chrome was showing. I changed the file name to "favicon.png", AND refreshed as folks showed above, it worked great. I'm using: Firefox version 55.0 Chrome version 60.0