practical guide to avoiding duplicate content in large sites with cloudflare caching
when a project grows, avoiding duplicate content in large sites stops being a small cleanup task and becomes part of the way the team ships software. this alphanode note walks through a practical approach to cloudflare caching inside a wordpress workflow.
security and maintenance notes
write the final notes immediately after the change ships. include the reason for the change, the files touched, the command used, and the metric that improved. this turns a one-time fix into reusable team knowledge.
security hardening works best as a checklist. confirm permissions, secrets, headers, upload limits, and logging. do not hide security settings inside unrelated code because future reviewers will miss them.
avoid mixing content decisions with infrastructure decisions. templates, query rules, and cache behavior should be separate enough that changing one does not unexpectedly break the others. for this cloudflare caching case, keep the owner, expected result, and rollback note in the same place.
rule: cache static routes, bypass logged-in traffic, and purge precisely after deploy.
implementation checklist
- run linting
- run unit tests
- run one integration check
- verify staging config
- tag the release
final notes
the best result is not only a faster or cleaner cloudflare caching implementation. it is a change that another developer can inspect, understand, and safely repeat. keep the final commands, metrics, and assumptions close to the article so future maintenance is easier.