# Developer Usage Guide This guide explains how developers can use the moz-cached-ohttp protocol in Firefox code. ## Basic Usage The moz-cached-ohttp protocol is designed to be used like any other resource loading mechanism in Firefox, with the key differences being that it provides privacy-preserving OHTTP-based loading with automatic caching, and cannot be used for regular content, so only privileged contexts can use the scheme. ## Creating Resource Requests To load a resource via the moz-cached-ohttp protocol, construct a URL in the following format: ```javascript const targetImageURL = "https://example.com/image.jpg"; const encodedURL = encodeURIComponent(targetImageURL); const ohttpImageURL = `moz-cached-ohttp://newtab-image/?url=${encodedURL}`; ``` **Important**: The host must be `newtab-image` - other hosts are not currently supported and will result in an error. :::{note} Target URLs must use the HTTPS protocol. HTTP URLs will be rejected. ::: ### Using with Image Elements The protocol can be used directly in HTML image elements within privileged contexts. ```html ``` ### Using with Fetch API In privileged contexts, you can use the Fetch API: ```javascript try { const response = await fetch(ohttpImageURL); if (response.ok) { const blob = await response.blob(); // Use the image blob } } catch (error) { console.error("Failed to load image:", error); } ``` ## Performance Best Practices ### Cache Utilization The protocol automatically handles caching, but you can optimize usage: - **Consistent URLs**: Use the same encoded URL format for the same target resource - **Have the server provide appropriate cache lifetimes**: The longer the lifetime, the less we may need to refetch the resource on the same client. - **Respect cache headers**: Don't bypass cache unnecessarily with cache-busting parameters - **Monitor cache hits**: In development, verify that repeated requests hit the cache