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Preconnect

Updated on October 4, 2018
Preconnect

What is preconnect?

preconnect allows the browser to set up early connections before an HTTP request is actually sent to the server. Connections such as DNS Lookup, TCP Handshake, and TLS negotiation can be initiated beforehand, eliminating roundtrip latency for those connections and saving time for users.

With the use of the new preconnect hint, we are able to give modern browsers a better idea of what connections should be initiated before actual requests for information are requested. This method is favourable over the previous method where browsers try to predict which websites they should use preconnect with on their own.

Initiating a preconnect

A preconnect can be added directly to a link tag as an attribute in the HTML. It can also be delivered through the Link HTTP header or can be invoked by JavaScript based on user activity. The example below shows what it looks like to enable preconnect for the Zone Alias link for KeyCDN.

<link href='https://cdn.keycdn.com' rel='preconnect' crossorigin>

According to W3C Resource Hints, to initiate a preconnect, the user agent must carry out the following 6 steps:

  1. Resolve the URL defined by the href attribute.
  2. Let origin be preconnect URL's origin.
  3. Let corsAttributeState be the current state of the element's crossorigin content attribute.
  4. Let credentials be a boolean value set to true.
  5. If corsAttributeState is Anonymous and origin is not equal to current Document's origin, set credentials to false.
  6. Attempt to obtain connection with origin and credentials.

preconnect example

The following example, from Ilya Grigorik's blog, shows the comparison of latency times between loading resources with preconnect vs without preconnect. The first image displays a timeline of assets without the use of preconnect. As can be seen, the initial DNS, TCP, and TLS connections must be set for the initial HTML document.

Once this is complete, the same connections must take place for the css file which reveals that the page needs two fonts. Finally, connections are established for the DNS, TCP, and TLS of the font origin, from which both fonts can be downloaded in parallel. In total, the files take just over 2.6 seconds to load.

Source: Ilya Grigorik

Alternatively, when preconnect is used, the same initial DNS, TCP and TLS connections are established for the HTML document. However, the initial connections for the fonts can be established at the same time as the css file. This means once the css file is done downloading, the font files do not have to wait for the initial connections to be established but rather can just begin downloading - resulting in a time savings of ~0.6 seconds.

Source: Ilya Grigorik

preconnect successfully allows you to reduce the amount of round trips needed, efficiently initiate connections and decrease page load time.

Summary

Using preconnect with modern browsers can certainly help improve website performance as seen by the example in this article. Reducing the amount of round trips always plays a large part in optimizing page load times. However, as preconnect anticipates the use of connections, it opens sockets that may go unused which is suboptimal for both the client and server. Using preconnect in an efficient and thought out manner will not only help optimize your website but will also keep you from underutilizing resources.

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