I was contacted by Kyle Mathews saying the same thing. In the majority of situations Gatsby seems to cache and check itself. My version is 'slightly' faster, and handles the unlikely edge case of servers not using etags.
Interesting. Also I guess it could be useful to write some custom caching, to persist the image-cache over gatsby. So if gatsby clears its cache, it will still be there. This would be interesting for peeps with gigabytes of Media-Files on their WordPress, who want to make sure, that they never ever have pull everything in again.
I'll update some info in this post. Thanks for the explanation.
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I was contacted by Kyle Mathews saying the same thing. In the majority of situations Gatsby seems to cache and check itself. My version is 'slightly' faster, and handles the unlikely edge case of servers not using etags.
The conversation: twitter.com/robertmars/status/1172...
I suppose it depends on your environment. I quite like skipping the server checks, as it seems like an extra step.
Interesting. Also I guess it could be useful to write some custom caching, to persist the image-cache over gatsby. So if gatsby clears its cache, it will still be there. This would be interesting for peeps with gigabytes of Media-Files on their WordPress, who want to make sure, that they never ever have pull everything in again.
I'll update some info in this post. Thanks for the explanation.