Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

In Firefox 3, the answer is 6 per domain: as soon as a 7th XmlHttpRequest (on any tab) to the same domain is fired, it is queued until one of the other 6 finish.

What are the numbers for the other major browsers?

Also, are there ways around these limits without having my users modify their browser settings? For example, are there limits to the number of jsonp requests (which use script tag injection rather than an XmlHttpRequest object)?

Background: My users can make XmlHttpRequests from a web page to the server, asking the server to run ssh commands on remote hosts. If the remote hosts are down, the ssh command takes a few minutes to fail, eventually preventing my users from performing any further commands.

share|improve this question
Thinking about your situation, what is the feasibility of pinging the remote hose to see if it is up or down? This won't answer your question, but this may be a better workflow. – Bob Feb 18 '09 at 13:44
Thanks Bob, that's one of the two approaches I had planned to fix this problem -- I considered mentioning it in the Question but decided it was off-topic. (Another approach is to have the server, which I control, timeout the ssh requests.) – Michael Gundlach Feb 18 '09 at 13:56
1  
I think you pretty much have your answer... it's more than safe to assume Safari and Chrome support at least 2, so you can always assume 2. – Rex M Feb 19 '09 at 1:12
Using Chrome 2.0.172.28 on Windows Vista I got 6 concurrent connections. – Callum May 29 '09 at 1:35
2  
I just found this page stevesouders.com/blog/2008/03/20/… which gives a few more numbers and a discussion about this. – David Johnstone Feb 15 '10 at 5:40
show 2 more comments

8 Answers

up vote 54 down vote accepted

One trick you can use to increase the number of concurrent conncetions is to host your images from a different sub domain. These will be treated as seperate requests, each domain is what will be limited to the concurrent maximum.

IE6, IE7 - Have a limit of two. IE8 is 6 if your a broadband, 2 if you are dial up.

share|improve this answer
Thanks, Bob. So are you saying that FF actually limits all requests to 6, not just AJAX requests? – Michael Gundlach Feb 18 '09 at 13:36
2  
No, the limits are imposed on the domain. So you could technically get FF up to 12 connections if you had a subdomain in addition to your site. – Bob Feb 18 '09 at 13:39
Just to clarify, the browser does the limiting (server can technically have its own) based on the name of the domain. – Bob Feb 18 '09 at 13:40
So if I understand you, FF limits all requests (to a single domain) to 6 -- not just XmlHttpRequests to a single domain. And other browsers do the same thing with different limits. Correct? – Michael Gundlach Feb 18 '09 at 13:54
Ohh yes, If you have a page with a thousand images, it will download them in groups of six. I believe most other mainstream browsers work the same way. – Bob Feb 18 '09 at 13:59

The network results at Browserscope will give you both Connections per Hostname and Max Connections for popular browsers. The data is gathered by running tests on users "in the wild," so it will stay up to date.

share|improve this answer

With IE6 / IE7 one can tweak the number of concurrent requests in the registry. Here's how to set it to four each.

[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Internet Settings]
"MaxConnectionsPerServer"=dword:00000004
"MaxConnectionsPer1_0Server"=dword:00000004
share|improve this answer
-1. OP said without having my users modify their browser settings. Also, it not practical since one would have to do this on each client. – Razort4x Apr 12 at 6:30
This is nonetheless a very useful thing to know, related to this issue. Perhaps it would have been better posted in a comment than as an answer? – JD Smith Apr 29 at 18:37

I have writen a single file AJAX tester. Enjoy it!!! Just because I have had problems with my hosting provider

<?php /*

Author:   Luis Siquot
Purpose:  Check ajax performance and errors
License:  GPL
site5:    Please don't drop json requests (nor delay)!!!!

*/

$r = (int)$_GET['r'];
$w = (int)$_GET['w'];
if($r) { 
   sleep($w);
   echo json_encode($_GET);
   die ();
}  //else
?><head>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">

var _settimer;
var _timer;
var _waiting;

$(function(){
  clearTable();
  $('#boton').bind('click', donow);
})

function donow(){
  var w;
  var estim = 0;
  _waiting = $('#total')[0].value * 1;
  clearTable();
  for(var r=1;r<=_waiting;r++){
       w = Math.floor(Math.random()*6)+2;
       estim += w;
       dodebug({r:r, w:w});
       $.ajax({url: '<?php echo $_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME']; ?>',
               data:    {r:r, w:w},
               dataType: 'json',   // 'html', 
               type: 'GET',
               success: function(CBdata, status) {
                  CBdebug(CBdata);
               }
       });
  }
  doStat(estim);
  timer(estim+10);
}

function doStat(what){
    $('#stat').replaceWith(
       '<table border="0" id="stat"><tr><td>Request Time Sum=<th>'+what+
       '<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;/2=<th>'+Math.ceil(what/2)+
       '<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;/3=<th>'+Math.ceil(what/3)+
       '<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;/4=<th>'+Math.ceil(what/4)+
       '<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;/6=<th>'+Math.ceil(what/6)+
       '<td>&nbsp;&nbsp;/8=<th>'+Math.ceil(what/8)+
       '<td> &nbsp; (seconds)</table>'
    );
}

function timer(what){
  if(what)         {_timer = 0; _settimer = what;}
  if(_waiting==0)  {
    $('#showTimer')[0].innerHTML = 'completed in <b>' + _timer + ' seconds</b> (aprox)';
    return ;
  }
  if(_timer<_settimer){
     $('#showTimer')[0].innerHTML = _timer;
     setTimeout("timer()",1000);
     _timer++;
     return;
  }
  $('#showTimer')[0].innerHTML = '<b>don\'t wait any more!!!</b>';
}


function CBdebug(what){
    _waiting--;
    $('#req'+what.r)[0].innerHTML = 'x';
}


function dodebug(what){
    var tt = '<tr><td>' + what.r + '<td>' + what.w + '<td id=req' + what.r + '>&nbsp;'
    $('#debug').append(tt);
}


function clearTable(){
    $('#debug').replaceWith('<table border="1" id="debug"><tr><td>Request #<td>Wait Time<td>Done</table>');
}


</script>
</head>
<body>
<center>
<input type="button" value="start" id="boton">
<input type="text" value="80" id="total" size="2"> concurrent json requests
<table id="stat"><tr><td>&nbsp;</table>
Elapsed Time: <span id="showTimer"></span>
<table id="debug"></table>
</center>
</body>
share|improve this answer
so I confirm, FF3 launches up to six concurrent requests – Luis Siquot Apr 12 '11 at 22:45

According to IE 9 – What’s Changed? on the HttpWatch blog, IE9 still has a 2 connection limit when over VPN.

Using a VPN Still Clobbers IE 9 Performance

We previously reported about the scaling back of the maximum number of concurrent connections in IE 8 when your PC uses a VPN connection. This happened even if the browser traffic didn’t go over that connection.

Unfortunately, IE 9 is affected by VPN connections in the same way:

share|improve this answer

I just checked with www.browserscope.org and with IE9 and Chrome 24 you can have 6 concurrent connections to a single domain, and up to 17 to multiple ones.

share|improve this answer

I believe there is a maximum number of concurrent http requests that browsers will make to the same domain, which is in the order of 4-8 requests depending on the user's settings and browser.

You could set up your requests to go to different domains, which may or may not be feasible. The Yahoo guys did a lot of research in this area, which you can read about (here). Remember that every new domain you add also requires a DNS lookup. The YSlow guys recommend between 2 and 4 domains to achieve a good compromise between parallel requests and DNS lookups, although this is focusing on the page's loading time, not subsequent AJAX requests.

Can I ask why you want to make so many requests? There is good reasons for the browsers limiting the number of requests to the same domain. You will be better off bundling requests if possible.

share|improve this answer
My XmlHttpRequests cannot go to different domains as you suggest, due to the Same Origin Policy. (Perhaps this is an argument for using jsonp to get around this problem.) This page is a command-and-control dashboard for many computers; thus a request is spawned per execution requested by the user. – Michael Gundlach Feb 18 '09 at 13:52

Here's the list so far -- please help complete it!

Number of concurrent requests of any type (including AJAX, image loads, etc) to a single domain:

FF 2: 2
FF 3: 6
IE 6/7: 2
IE 8: 2 on dialup, 6 on broadband
Safari: ?
Chrome: ?

share|improve this answer
2  
no reason to list this info here, as it will get stale. Better to post a link to a specialist site that updates this type of info regularly (see above post by Kevin H.) – Anatoly G Aug 28 '12 at 17:16
1  
Anatoly G, do you know link to such kind of sites? – vmaksym Aug 31 '12 at 7:54

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.