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[3.2.x] Fixed note about ISP caching in docs.

Regression in 7aabd6238028f4bb78d0687bbccc97bcf634e28b.

Backport of 31b6ce9ff938a0968f2e526f5d5e106fd17e3dfa from main
This commit is contained in:
Ben Sturmfels 2021-05-20 10:17:16 +10:00 committed by Mariusz Felisiak
parent d5c675ac7c
commit a0782f50d4

View File

@ -1144,11 +1144,13 @@ the request reaches your website.
Here are a few examples of downstream caches: Here are a few examples of downstream caches:
* Your ISP may cache certain pages, so if you requested a page from * When using HTTP, your :abbr:`ISP (Internet Service Provider)` may cache
https://example.com/, your ISP would send you the page without having to certain pages, so if you requested a page from ``http://example.com/``, your
access example.com directly. The maintainers of example.com have no ISP would send you the page without having to access example.com directly.
knowledge of this caching; the ISP sits between example.com and your Web The maintainers of example.com have no knowledge of this caching; the ISP
browser, handling all of the caching transparently. sits between example.com and your Web browser, handling all of the caching
transparently. Such caching is not possible under HTTPS as it would
constitute a man-in-the-middle attack.
* Your Django website may sit behind a *proxy cache*, such as Squid Web * Your Django website may sit behind a *proxy cache*, such as Squid Web
Proxy Cache (http://www.squid-cache.org/), that caches pages for Proxy Cache (http://www.squid-cache.org/), that caches pages for