530/652
What is this check, and why should you care
Having a cache hit ensures the fastest possible delivery of content to end users.
The response header X-Cache had a value of TCP_MEM_HIT from a23-39-111-31.deploy.akamaitechnologies.com (AkamaiGHost/22.5.2-6211a6b44d39bfe2e575630957feecb9) (-).
Akamai has documentation on how to interpret the X-Cache and X-Cache-Remote headers.
Maximum possible points
100
What is this check, and why should you care
Using a CDN is extremely useful for caching purposes.
Maximum possible points
50
What is this check, and why should you care
The time that it takes for a user's browser to receive the first byte of page content.
The lower the TTFB, the faster your site will be perceived by the end user.
To get maximum points, your TTFB must be less than or equal to 30ms. If your TTFB is more than 1 second then you get no points here.
Maximum possible points
50
What is this check, and why should you care
An ETag is an opaque identifier for a specific version of a resource, defined in RFC 9110 §8.8.3. When a client revisits a URL it can send the previously-seen value back in an If-None-Match request header (RFC 9110 §13.1.2); if the server still considers the response current it returns an empty 304 Not Modified instead of the full body, saving bandwidth and origin work.
An ETag header is present but does not produce an HTTP 304 response. However a Last-Modified header is also present, which is sufficient for conditional requests. No penalty is applied.
Akamai has documentation on how to enable Etag support (requires login).
See the Wikipedia page on ETag for more background.
To get maximum points, you need to have ETag identifiers and an HTTP 304 response must be received when using a valid If-None-Match request header.
Maximum possible points
30
What is this check, and why should you care
The Last-Modified response header carries the date the resource was last changed, defined in RFC 9110 §8.8.2. When a client revisits the URL it can send the previously-seen value back in an If-Modified-Since request header (RFC 9110 §13.1.3); if the resource has not changed the server returns an empty 304 Not Modified instead of the full body, saving bandwidth and origin work.
An HTTP request with the request header If-Modified-Since with a value of Wed, 10 Jun 2026 00:20:00 GMT was sent, and an HTTP 304 was responded with.
Maximum possible points
30
What is this check, and why should you care
Having tiered caching can help improve the cache hit ratio of your site because it provides an additional layer of caching in front of your origin.
Maximum possible points
25
What is this check, and why should you care
HTTP compression reduces the size of a response body by eliminating redundancy. The client advertises supported algorithms in the Accept-Encoding request header, and the server reports which one it used in the Content-Encoding response header — both are defined in RFC 9110 §8.4.
The four common encodings each have their own specification: gzip (RFC 1952), deflate (RFC 1951), br / Brotli (RFC 7932), and zstd / Zstandard (RFC 8878). Smaller responses load faster and use less bandwidth, which especially matters on mobile networks.
The response header Content-Encoding had a value of br.
Akamai has documentation on how to enable Brotli compression.
See the Wikipedia page on HTTP compression for more background.
To get maximum points, you need to use Brotli or Zstandard compression.
Maximum possible points
20
What is this check, and why should you care
Drupal 8+ provides an Internal Page Cache module recommended for small to medium-sized websites.
There is value in using this module, even when you are using Akamai, due to the low cache lifetime of 8 minutes and 33 seconds.
To get maximum points, you must enable the page_cache module, and have a HIT on Drupal's page cache.
See Drupal's documentation on the Internal Page Cache module. Also, Wim Leers wrote a really awesome blog post on the release of this module with important background.
Maximum possible points
20
What is this check, and why should you care
Akamai has very strict controls around cache tag lengths, counts and characters. If you exceed or break these controls then you risk your content not being invalidated when you issue a cache tag purge.
No issues were found.
See the Akamai technical documentation on how to interpret this header.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
Drupal sets a session cookie (named SESS<hash> over HTTP, or SSESS<hash> over HTTPS) the first time the session is read or written during a request. When a session cookie is present, most reverse proxies and CDNs will bypass their cache entirely for all HTML responses, because the response is considered personalised.
Anonymous page requests should not need a session at all. Contributed modules known to start a session for anonymous users include:
$_SESSION for anonymous users (#1897126).To get maximum points, the response must not include a SESS or SSESS cookie. If it does, identify which module is starting the session and either disable it, reconfigure it, or find an alternative that does not require a session for anonymous users.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
CSS aggregation reduces the number of assets your site needs to download. The filename contains a hash of all the file contents, meaning you can cache these files for an extremely long time with no negative consequences.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
Javascript aggregation reduces the number of assets your site needs to download. The filename contains a hash of all the file contents, meaning you can cache these files for an extremely long time with no negative consequences.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
Drupal 9.5+ introduces a new debug setting to make it easier to debug render caching. This setting will add cache debugging output for each rendered element.
The main issue with this is that this slows down your page loads (on top increasing your page weight).
To get maximum points, you must disable the render cache debug.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
Drupal 7+ provides a Statistics module to which records content view statistics in Drupal's database.
The main issue with this module is that it sends an un-cacheable HTTP POST request to your site to record a 'content view' statistic. This does not scale well as you Drupal site gets more traffic.
To get maximum points, you must disable the statistics module.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
Drupal 8+ uses Twig for templating, and the Twig template engine offers a debug tool to which emits out a list of template filenames in the HTML source.
The main issue with this is that you often also have other Twig related performance issues as well, e.g. automatic reloading.
To get maximum points, you must disable Twig debug.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
You can increase the cache hit rate of your site by stripping certain query parameters from the cache key.
FBCLID is one such parameter that can be stripped by your caching server. This query parameter only really serves a purpose for Javascript to read, and Javascript can still read it from the browser URL.
This check requested the URL https://www.education.gov.au/?fbclid=1781051187.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
You can increase the cache hit rate of your site by stripping certain query parameters from the cache key.
GCLID and GCLSRC are two such parameters that can be stripped by your caching server. These query parameters only really serve a purpose for Javascript to read, and Javascript can still read it from the browser URL.
This check requested the URL https://www.education.gov.au/?gclsrc=1781051187&gclid=1781051187.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
You can increase the cache hit rate of your site by stripping certain query parameters from the cache key.
TTCLID is one such parameter that can be stripped by your caching server. This query parameter only really serves a purpose for Javascript to read, and Javascript can still read it from the browser URL.
This check requested the URL https://www.education.gov.au/?ttclid=1781051187.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
You can increase the cache hit rate of your site by stripping certain query parameters from the cache key.
UTM is a collection of parameters that can be stripped by your caching server. These query parameters only really serve a purpose for Javascript to read, and Javascript can still read them from the browser URL.
This check requested the URL https://www.education.gov.au/?utm_source=1781051187&utm_medium=1781051187&utm_campaign=1781051187&utm_id=1781051187.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
There is a SPAM protection module in Drupal called Honeypot.
The honeypot module has a feature that adds a time based hidden form field to forms to protect against bots filling them in too quickly. This is a nice feature, however it happens to disable caching for the entire page. This is terrible for high traffic sites.
It is recommended to disable this time based feature, and only use the core honeypot feature of a hidden input field.
Maximum possible points
5
What is this check, and why should you care
The language_cookie module breaks proxy caching because it makes Drupal’s response vary by a cookie, which most HTTP caches don’t handle efficiently.
The module also has a side effect of breaking Drupal’s page_cache system as well - see the issue #3512070.
To get maximum points, you must disable the language_cookie module.
Maximum possible points
5
What is this check, and why should you care
There are 2 filesystems in Drupal - public files and private files.
Private files force Drupal to bootstrap in order to serve the file, and access control is checked every single time. This is useful for sensitive files, but a hindrance when your site is under high load.
It is recommended to use Drupal's public file system for static, non-sensitive files, and reserve the use of private files for dynamic, or sensitive files.
Maximum possible points
5
What is this check, and why should you care
A cached response is reusable for the duration of its freshness lifetime, defined in RFC 9111 §4.2. The freshness lifetime is taken from Cache-Control: s-maxage or max-age (§5.2), and falls back to the Expires header (§5.3) or a heuristic if neither is set. The longer the freshness lifetime, the higher the cache hit ratio at any given traffic level.
To get maximum points, your cache lifetime must be greater than or equal to 4 weeks. If your cache lifetime is less, then you will get some proportion of the score based on how close to 4 weeks you are.
The current cache lifetime is 513 seconds (8 minutes and 33 seconds).
Maximum possible points
100
What is this check, and why should you care
HTTP 404 (Not Found) is one of the response status codes that RFC 9110 §15.1 marks as heuristically cacheable, and RFC 9111 §4.2.2 defines the heuristic-freshness rules a cache may apply when no explicit freshness is provided. Caching 404s — even briefly — offloads repeated probes (broken links, scanners, missing assets) from your origin.
To get maximum points, you need to have the ability to cache an HTTP 404 for any amount of time.
This check requested the URL https://www.education.gov.au/cachingscorebrokenurltest.
Maximum possible points
20
Performed on the asset: https://www.education.gov.au/themes/custom/gurney/logo.png
See the HTTP headers for this image file.
What is this check, and why should you care
Having a cache hit ensures the fastest possible delivery of content to end users.
The response header X-Cache had a value of TCP_MEM_HIT from a23-39-111-31.deploy.akamaitechnologies.com (AkamaiGHost/22.5.2-6211a6b44d39bfe2e575630957feecb9) (-).
Akamai has documentation on how to interpret the X-Cache and X-Cache-Remote headers.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
An ETag is an opaque identifier for a specific version of a resource, defined in RFC 9110 §8.8.3. When a client revisits a URL it can send the previously-seen value back in an If-None-Match request header (RFC 9110 §13.1.2); if the server still considers the response current it returns an empty 304 Not Modified instead of the full body, saving bandwidth and origin work.
An HTTP request with the request header If-None-Match with a value of "69e9805a-6056" was sent, and an HTTP 304 was responded with.
Akamai has documentation on how to enable Etag support (requires login).
See the Wikipedia page on ETag for more background.
To get maximum points, you need to have ETag identifiers and an HTTP 304 response must be received when using a valid If-None-Match request header.
Maximum possible points
3
What is this check, and why should you care
The Last-Modified response header carries the date the resource was last changed, defined in RFC 9110 §8.8.2. When a client revisits the URL it can send the previously-seen value back in an If-Modified-Since request header (RFC 9110 §13.1.3); if the resource has not changed the server returns an empty 304 Not Modified instead of the full body, saving bandwidth and origin work.
An HTTP request with the request header If-Modified-Since with a value of Thu, 23 Apr 2026 02:13:46 GMT was sent, and an HTTP 304 was responded with.
Maximum possible points
3
What is this check, and why should you care
A cached response is reusable for the duration of its freshness lifetime, defined in RFC 9111 §4.2. The freshness lifetime is taken from Cache-Control: s-maxage or max-age (§5.2), and falls back to the Expires header (§5.3) or a heuristic if neither is set. The longer the freshness lifetime, the higher the cache hit ratio at any given traffic level.
To get maximum points, your cache lifetime must be greater than or equal to 4 weeks. If your cache lifetime is less, then you will get some proportion of the score based on how close to 4 weeks you are.
The current cache lifetime is 1532315 seconds (2 weeks and 3 days).
Maximum possible points
10
Performed on the asset: https://www.education.gov.au/sites/default/files/css/css_dM1OlRUj5zQGRS8pWkXoch0dSgwDQP_ukfNMELL88Co.css?delta=0&language=en&theme=gurney&include=eJxdkAGqAyEMRC9klZ5IoqaubDRiYhdv_-VDaVkIYfJChiHwfC4fpio3cRVKM5CSMrTlPsK-Bjc1AeLplXd196N9idxM5IEujdmBLEzlyLUTKpqEXWMVf_E4X8SXFwWd4m6zD8TxNHmOhstl4gD0EF1UWjbbiO-sIkHLeMcdBuQB_ZBPmi-xs_UZqMiByQjCiIf_zer0wIq2llbqPowiRoriVRJ6IBzq9kaNLFGs-wWC5l3wEvffbeU0Cf8AGFqEUQ
See the HTTP headers for this CSS file.
What is this check, and why should you care
Having a cache hit ensures the fastest possible delivery of content to end users.
The response header X-Cache had a value of TCP_MEM_HIT from a23-39-111-31.deploy.akamaitechnologies.com (AkamaiGHost/22.5.2-6211a6b44d39bfe2e575630957feecb9) (-).
Akamai has documentation on how to interpret the X-Cache and X-Cache-Remote headers.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
An ETag is an opaque identifier for a specific version of a resource, defined in RFC 9110 §8.8.3. When a client revisits a URL it can send the previously-seen value back in an If-None-Match request header (RFC 9110 §13.1.2); if the server still considers the response current it returns an empty 304 Not Modified instead of the full body, saving bandwidth and origin work.
An ETag header is present but does not produce an HTTP 304 response. However a Last-Modified header is also present, which is sufficient for conditional requests. No penalty is applied.
Akamai has documentation on how to enable Etag support (requires login).
See the Wikipedia page on ETag for more background.
To get maximum points, you need to have ETag identifiers and an HTTP 304 response must be received when using a valid If-None-Match request header.
Maximum possible points
3
What is this check, and why should you care
The Last-Modified response header carries the date the resource was last changed, defined in RFC 9110 §8.8.2. When a client revisits the URL it can send the previously-seen value back in an If-Modified-Since request header (RFC 9110 §13.1.3); if the resource has not changed the server returns an empty 304 Not Modified instead of the full body, saving bandwidth and origin work.
An HTTP request with the request header If-Modified-Since with a value of Thu, 21 May 2026 03:46:49 GMT was sent, and an HTTP 304 was responded with.
Maximum possible points
3
What is this check, and why should you care
HTTP compression reduces the size of a response body by eliminating redundancy. The client advertises supported algorithms in the Accept-Encoding request header, and the server reports which one it used in the Content-Encoding response header — both are defined in RFC 9110 §8.4.
The four common encodings each have their own specification: gzip (RFC 1952), deflate (RFC 1951), br / Brotli (RFC 7932), and zstd / Zstandard (RFC 8878). Smaller responses load faster and use less bandwidth, which especially matters on mobile networks.
The response header Content-Encoding had a value of br.
Akamai has documentation on how to enable Brotli compression.
See the Wikipedia page on HTTP compression for more background.
To get maximum points, you need to use Brotli or Zstandard compression.
Maximum possible points
2
What is this check, and why should you care
A cached response is reusable for the duration of its freshness lifetime, defined in RFC 9111 §4.2. The freshness lifetime is taken from Cache-Control: s-maxage or max-age (§5.2), and falls back to the Expires header (§5.3) or a heuristic if neither is set. The longer the freshness lifetime, the higher the cache hit ratio at any given traffic level.
To get maximum points, your cache lifetime must be greater than or equal to 4 weeks. If your cache lifetime is less, then you will get some proportion of the score based on how close to 4 weeks you are.
The current cache lifetime is 912035 seconds (1 week and 3 days).
Maximum possible points
10
Performed on the asset: https://www.education.gov.au/sites/default/files/js/js_x5ox2v3_wHV1mtroaYflY6d_scbnPNo2o5AKMkN-XNo.js?scope=header&delta=0&language=en&theme=gurney&include=eJxdjlEKwzAMQy-U1fREwU08k9W1Q-Kw5fbLz2AUhJAeCIT7PuMx3E07XFg0YM5uqBN-YXs2Uw8HpjO6LVX4y_HVQ7JGkNuoKBsOt2RXFXIKbMZC0ZGBl937hi_8BB5NaQKLHSiP7lOKclh7u7OLBJXpjq2SxkaYeyU8qa17vaTQi9O7ZIoo1ByKFv8C8_pcTQ
See the HTTP headers for this JavaScript file.
What is this check, and why should you care
Having a cache hit ensures the fastest possible delivery of content to end users.
The response header X-Cache had a value of TCP_MEM_HIT from a23-39-111-31.deploy.akamaitechnologies.com (AkamaiGHost/22.5.2-6211a6b44d39bfe2e575630957feecb9) (-).
Akamai has documentation on how to interpret the X-Cache and X-Cache-Remote headers.
Maximum possible points
10
What is this check, and why should you care
An ETag is an opaque identifier for a specific version of a resource, defined in RFC 9110 §8.8.3. When a client revisits a URL it can send the previously-seen value back in an If-None-Match request header (RFC 9110 §13.1.2); if the server still considers the response current it returns an empty 304 Not Modified instead of the full body, saving bandwidth and origin work.
An ETag header is present but does not produce an HTTP 304 response. However a Last-Modified header is also present, which is sufficient for conditional requests. No penalty is applied.
Akamai has documentation on how to enable Etag support (requires login).
See the Wikipedia page on ETag for more background.
To get maximum points, you need to have ETag identifiers and an HTTP 304 response must be received when using a valid If-None-Match request header.
Maximum possible points
3
What is this check, and why should you care
The Last-Modified response header carries the date the resource was last changed, defined in RFC 9110 §8.8.2. When a client revisits the URL it can send the previously-seen value back in an If-Modified-Since request header (RFC 9110 §13.1.3); if the resource has not changed the server returns an empty 304 Not Modified instead of the full body, saving bandwidth and origin work.
An HTTP request with the request header If-Modified-Since with a value of Thu, 21 May 2026 03:46:32 GMT was sent, and an HTTP 304 was responded with.
Maximum possible points
3
What is this check, and why should you care
HTTP compression reduces the size of a response body by eliminating redundancy. The client advertises supported algorithms in the Accept-Encoding request header, and the server reports which one it used in the Content-Encoding response header — both are defined in RFC 9110 §8.4.
The four common encodings each have their own specification: gzip (RFC 1952), deflate (RFC 1951), br / Brotli (RFC 7932), and zstd / Zstandard (RFC 8878). Smaller responses load faster and use less bandwidth, which especially matters on mobile networks.
The response header Content-Encoding had a value of br.
Akamai has documentation on how to enable Brotli compression.
See the Wikipedia page on HTTP compression for more background.
To get maximum points, you need to use Brotli or Zstandard compression.
Maximum possible points
2
What is this check, and why should you care
A cached response is reusable for the duration of its freshness lifetime, defined in RFC 9111 §4.2. The freshness lifetime is taken from Cache-Control: s-maxage or max-age (§5.2), and falls back to the Expires header (§5.3) or a heuristic if neither is set. The longer the freshness lifetime, the higher the cache hit ratio at any given traffic level.
To get maximum points, your cache lifetime must be greater than or equal to 4 weeks. If your cache lifetime is less, then you will get some proportion of the score based on how close to 4 weeks you are.
The current cache lifetime is 912021 seconds (1 week and 3 days).
Maximum possible points
10
| Name | Value |
|---|---|
| Status Code | HTTP 200 |
| Alt-Svc | h3=":443"; ma=93600 |
| Cache-Control | public, max-age=513 |
| Connection | keep-alive |
| Content-Encoding | br |
| Content-Language | en |
| Content-Length | 15133 |
| Content-Type | text/html; charset=UTF-8 |
| Date | Wed, 10 Jun 2026 00:26:27 GMT |
| ETag | W/"1781050800" |
| Edge-Cache-Tag | 201dv 5c55l jvj61 anv8c ecbsb 23a39 2ir28 3l8a5 5jo0f 43ifs 7oeef 2n6u0 7g07s 67qdk 7rs2f 7e9vr 5h4gg 1faap 6fks0 4uudm 30tn7 bdubb 5dqjg 4mvg5 1jlfl 3m7mk 20o9v 2phna 2ahm9 49a0s 47oe3 1s6sh jjt7r 156hb 369vu 63t4s 13tjj 68bp0 376dp 2d95t 4dorj 1eate 62gup 4s0n1 2249t 375tb 6bd0m 5dvns 5d2s7 6qdua sqilk tmktk 70qa3 2b8h0 3jajr 4sif0 3bg0p 4ept7 2njf5 o5km5 kn3dm 6r0hp 4fk1b 18hsn hievn 3va1s 2s028 7ncdq ec512 5rlcs 42mt2 2loge n2c0c cfjqg m8bgu 1k7jm 16a74 57b9a 7f616 1ubga 4jtte 2ds1e 28ldm ghjl7 1ugjc 24pls 33man 6785q 27nso 5965h 47t8f 1kiea 4t5rb 48d7d 4h02i 7799c 28ijm 4002v 4jlb3 0e62k 1i4pf 58miv 7dcro c651l 3itt7 7e1hk 4ehic 42r1s 30l4o 52i3o 68tt3 10uen nv8mq 18sir n8fut 70utd 65gnq 7g0rt 3bmfn 1ihi0 7qlf9 4p5f3 70s23 7doja 505ii 78iu0 6oqj9 3dqtp 49ebi 2q87f 4sute 6ph3r 4r7ip uo9ah 4vqng 1get7 2m574 3phu9 3goqf 74au2 21j2a 6gbpp 15s02 1u6l7 1batq 3q3rq 1moau 22oi6 365jb 2klcu 93i1j 7i7t4 4tqib k5v48 oteog 62m9q 5darh e301m nfmju 4q6d3 5h5go 3ssbd m6p37 3sagi 5bhdj 423av 2qapt 5kdkt 3erl6 1sslb ornsp 6879a 551o3 3oeur 5bg3p 5m3tr 2opit 6143d 3kecn 2eae2 46ld7 5447b 1t888 6fdk8 7fh03 lg4u0 33knp 2q5tu 37h16 1rkfk 26469 2l5eo 168rv 4cpgb 7d2aj 5r48g 694tf 47slb 3ercr fgduc 7hi8p 3r4oh 27oip 2d3jq 6knqq 18vkq 2bkgd k5bqc 258no 4biun 31h2v 3lgt2 7t8r1 7foc0 4fk0u 2f82p 7tk5r 120ep 1umgl 6phr7 315ef 153f1 ktceq 5j0uc 29vea 4ndti p5997 3t1o9 7b0hp 4um42 anjgm 7uauo 7l8fl 72mul 3tmnr 6n3s4 20tcm 2kfk1 6dc58 4msbl 60dcf 2s6t5 484ko 70gu4 2nd58 1n6qo |
| Expires | Wed, 10 Jun 2026 00:35:00 GMT |
| Last-Modified | Wed, 10 Jun 2026 00:20:00 GMT |
| X-Cache | TCP_MEM_HIT from a23-39-111-31.deploy.akamaitechnologies.com (AkamaiGHost/22.5.2-6211a6b44d39bfe2e575630957feecb9) (-) |
| X-Cache-Key | S/L/123975/915020/1d/www.education.gov.au/ |
| X-Cache-Key-Extended-Internal-Use-Only | S/L/123975/915020/1d/www.education.gov.au/ vcd=6147 |
| X-Check-Cacheable | YES |
| X-Drupal-Cache | HIT |
| X-Drupal-Dynamic-Cache | HIT |
| X-LAGOON | amazeeio-govcms6>sigsci-ingress-nginx>edu3-master:nginx>nginx-7cc4f7fb49-hsx72 |
You can use the following cURL command:
curl -sLIXGET -H 'Pragma: akamai-x-cache-on, akamai-x-cache-remote-on, akamai-x-check-cacheable, akamai-x-get-cache-key, akamai-x-get-cache-tags' -H 'Accept-Encoding: br, zstd, gzip, deflate' 'https://www.education.gov.au/' | sort