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Revision as of 18:42, 8 May 2005 editMinghong (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users13,145 edits Fix typo← Previous edit Revision as of 04:22, 21 June 2005 edit undoMementoVivere (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users5,459 edits Elaborated upon support for pipelining in HTTP/1.1 serversNext edit →
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Since it is possible to cram several HTTP requests in the same ] packet (the average ], or maximum segment size, being 512 bytes), fewer TCP packets are sent over the network, so pipelining benefits network load too. Since it is possible to cram several HTTP requests in the same ] packet (the average ], or maximum segment size, being 512 bytes), fewer TCP packets are sent over the network, so pipelining benefits network load too.


HTTP pipelining requires both the client and the server to support it. A server is required to support it in order to be HTTP/1.1 compliant. Recent versions of the ] support it. HTTP pipelining requires both the client and the server to support it. Servers are required to support it in order to be HTTP/1.1 compliant. Although these servers are required to allow pipelined requests, they are not required to pipeline responses. Recent versions of the ] support pipelining.


== How to enable HTTP pipelining in the Firefox web browser == == How to enable HTTP pipelining in the Firefox web browser ==

Revision as of 04:22, 21 June 2005

HTTP pipelining appeared in HTTP/1.1. It allows clients to send multiple requests at once, without waiting for an answer. Servers can send multiple answers without closing their socket too. This results in fewer roundtrips and faster load times. This is particularly useful for Satellite Internet connections and other connections with high latency as separate requests need not be made for each image/JavaScript file etc.

Since it is possible to cram several HTTP requests in the same TCP packet (the average MSS, or maximum segment size, being 512 bytes), fewer TCP packets are sent over the network, so pipelining benefits network load too.

HTTP pipelining requires both the client and the server to support it. Servers are required to support it in order to be HTTP/1.1 compliant. Although these servers are required to allow pipelined requests, they are not required to pipeline responses. Recent versions of the Apache HTTP Server support pipelining.

How to enable HTTP pipelining in the Firefox web browser

  1. Type about:config in the Location Bar.
  2. Scroll down to network.http.pipelining.
  3. Double click it so its value is set to true.
  4. Double click network.http.pipelining.maxrequests and enter a value into the box (2 to 8) and click OK.

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