In your filter have this line:
chain.doFilter(httpRequest, new AddExpiresHeaderResponse(httpResponse));
Where the response wrapper looks like:
class AddExpiresHeaderResponse extends HttpServletResponseWrapper {
public static final String[] CACHEABLE_CONTENT_TYPES = new String[] {
"text/css", "text/javascript", "image/png", "image/jpeg",
"image/gif", "image/jpg" };
static {
Arrays.sort(CACHEABLE_CONTENT_TYPES);
}
public AddExpiresHeaderResponse(HttpServletResponse response) {
super(response);
}
@Override
public void setContentType(String contentType) {
if (contentType != null && Arrays.binarySearch(CACHEABLE_CONTENT_TYPES, contentType) > -1) {
Calendar inTwoMonths = GeneralUtils.createCalendar();
inTwoMonths.add(Calendar.MONTH, 2);
super.setDateHeader("Expires", inTwoMonths.getTimeInMillis());
} else {
super.setHeader("Expires", "-1");
super.setHeader("Cache-Control", "no-store, no-cache, must-revalidate");
}
super.setContentType(contentType);
}
}
In short, this creates a response wrapper, which, on setting the content type, adds the expires header. (If you want, you can add whatever other headers you need as well). I've been using this filter + wrapper and it works.
See this question on one specific problem that this solves, and the original solution by BalusC.
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