The Hypertext Transfer Protocol, or HTTP, is a key component of the World Wide Web. It is the communications layer through which Web browsers request Web pages from Web servers and with which Web servers respond with the contents of the page. Like much of the Internet, it’s been around for decades, but a recent announcement reveals that HTTP/2 the first major update in 15 years is about to arrive.
The original HTTP protocol was the protocol first used by Sir Tim Berners-Lee at Cern where the Web was created in 1991. This was improved over many years and finalised as HTTP 1.1 in 1999, the current standard used worldwide. Over the years, the Web has changed dramatically, introducing images, complex style sheets and Javascript code, Flash and other embedded elements and more. The original HTTP was a simple protocol for a simple Web, it was not designed to handle increasingly media-rich websites.
For example, Google handles 40 000 Web searches per second every day. To handle the pressure of serving billions of Internet users, the company’s technicians launched a project in 2009 called SPDY (pronounced “speedy”) to improve HTTP. Originally only for internal use, other sites fielding heavy traffic such as Twitter, Facebook, WordPress and CloudFlare also implemented SPDY having seen its performance improvements.
This caught the attention of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), which develops and promotes Internet standards. IETF decided to use SPDY as the basis for HTTP/2 in 2012 — and the two protocols were developed in parallel. Even though Google spearheaded the protocol’s development, the work is continued by the IETF’s open working groups as it has done for other protocols for more than 30 years.
Google recently announced it was dropping SPDY in favour of the soon-to-arrive HTTP/2.
Web pages today can generate many requests for images, CSS style sheets, video and other embedded objects, off-site adverts, and so on — perhaps a hundred of these per page. This adds unnecessary strain to the Web server and slows the Web page loading time because HTTP 1.1 only supports one request per connection.
HTTP 1.1 is sensitive to high-latency connections — those with a slow response time. This can be a big problem when working on a mobile device using cellular networks, where even a high-speed connection can feel slow. HTTP pipelining allows the browser to send another request while waiting for the response of a previous request. While this would go some way to tackling high latency, it is susceptible to problems of its own and is disabled by default in most browsers.
Rather than using clear text, HTTP/2 is now a binary protocol, which is quicker to parse and more compact in transmission. While HTTP 1.1 had four different ways to handle a message, HTTP/2 reduces this to one. To tackle the multiple request issue, HTTP/2 allows only one connection per site. But using stream multiplexing fits many requests into a single connection. These streams are also bidirectional, which allows both the Web server and browser to transmit within a single connection. Each stream can be prioritised, so browsers are able to determine which image is the most important, or prioritise a new set of streams when you change between browser tabs.
HTTP is a stateless protocol — every connection comprises a request-response pair unconnected to any connections before or after. This means every request must also include any relevant data about the connection — this is sent in HTTP headers. As HTTP 1.1 evolved, the headers have grown larger as they incorporate new features. HTTP/2 uses header compression to shrink this overhead and speed up the connection, while improving security.
A final addition is server push. When a Web page is requested, the server sends back the page, but must wait for the Web browser to parse the page’s HTML and issue further requests for things it find in the code, such as images. Server push allows the server to send all the resources associated with a page when the page is requested, without waiting. This will cut a lot of the latency associated with Web connections.
Once Web servers and Web browsers start implementing HTTP/2 — which could be as soon as a few weeks from now — the Web browsing experience will feel quicker and more responsive. It will also make developers’ lives easier by not having to work around the limitations of HTTP 1.1.
In fact, some of the latest versions of popular browsers (Firefox 36, Chrome 40 and Internet Explorer 11) already support HTTP/2. For Chrome and Firefox, HTTP/2 will be used only over encrypted connections (SSL) — this, along with the Let’s Encrypt initiative, will probably boost the adoption of encryption more widely.
- Peter Maynard is PhD researcher in network security systems at Queen’s University Belfast
- This article was originally published on The Conversation