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#!/bin/bash | |
S3_BUCKET_NAME=$1 | |
CF_ID=$2 | |
# Sync all files except for service-worker and index | |
echo "Uploading files to $S3_BUCKET_NAME..." | |
aws s3 sync build s3://$S3_BUCKET_NAME/ \ | |
--acl public-read \ | |
--exclude service-worker.js \ | |
--exclude index.html | |
# Upload service-worker.js with directive to not cache it | |
echo "Uploading service-worker.js" | |
aws s3 cp build/service-worker.js s3://$S3_BUCKET_NAME/service-worker.js \ | |
--metadata-directive REPLACE \ | |
--cache-control max-age=0,no-cache,no-store,must-revalidate \ | |
--content-type application/javascript \ | |
--acl public-read | |
# Upload index.html | |
echo "Uploading index.html" | |
aws s3 cp build/index.html s3://$S3_BUCKET_NAME/index.html \ | |
--metadata-directive REPLACE \ | |
--cache-control max-age=0,no-cache,no-store,must-revalidate \ | |
--content-type text/html \ | |
--acl public-read | |
# Purge the cloudfront cache | |
echo "Purging the cache for CloudFront" | |
aws cloudfront create-invalidation \ | |
--distribution-id $CF_ID \ | |
--paths / |
@joaoportela the s-max-age header is irrelevant to the client, but can be used to tell cloudFront how long to cache a file.
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudFront/latest/DeveloperGuide/Expiration.html#ExpirationDownloadDist
@Fantaztig , @joaoportela thanks for those interesting thoughts and remarks! It's very useful! It makes configuring cache less of a nightmare... :)
@joaoportela the s-max-age header is irrelevant to the client, but can be used to tell cloudFront how long to cache a file.
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonCloudFront/latest/DeveloperGuide/Expiration.html#ExpirationDownloadDist
You're correct. I somehow missed the s-
prefix when reading your comment.
Personally, I would still avoid using that technique. But it is a valid and correct approach.
@Fantaztig no. because those headers also go to the clients (browsers usually) and you have no way of invalidating those.
As a rule of thumb, if you have to purge cloudfront cache its because you messed up somewhere.