By default, the proxy server looks at the ``s-maxage`` instruction in the ``Cache-Control`` header to know for how long it should cache a page. But the ``Cache-Control`` header is also sent to the client. Any caches on the Internet, for example the Internet provider or from a cooperate network might look at ``s-maxage`` and cache the page. This can be a problem, notably when you do :doc:`explicit cache invalidation `. In that scenario, you want your proxy server to keep a page in cache for a long time, but caches outside your control must not keep the page for a long duration. One option could be to set a high ``s-maxage`` for the proxy and simply rewrite the response to remove or reduce the ``s-maxage``. This is not a good solution however, as you start to duplicate your caching rule definitions. The solution to this issue provided here is to use a separate, different header called ``X-Reverse-Proxy-TTL`` that controls the TTL of the proxy server to keep ``s-maxage`` for other proxies. Because this is not a standard feature, you need to add configuration to your proxy server.