Keep-Alive
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The HTTP Keep-Alive
request and response header allows the sender to hint how a connection may be used in terms of a timeout and a maximum amount of requests.
Note: For Keep-Alive
to have any effect, the message must also include a Connection: keep-alive
header.
HTTP/1.0 closes the connection after each request/response interaction by default, so persistent connections in HTTP/1.0 must be explicitly negotiated.
Some clients and servers might wish to be compatible with previous approaches to persistent connections, and can do this with a Connection: keep-alive
request header.
Additional parameters for the connection can be requested with the Keep-Alive
header.
Warning: Connection-specific header fields such as Connection
and Keep-Alive
are prohibited in HTTP/2 and HTTP/3.
Chrome and Firefox ignore them in HTTP/2 responses, but Safari conforms to the HTTP/2 specification requirements and does not load any response that contains them.
Header type | Request header, Response header |
---|---|
Forbidden header name | Yes |
Syntax
Keep-Alive: <parameters>
Directives
<parameters>
-
A comma-separated list of parameters, each consisting of an identifier and a value separated by the equal sign (
=
). The following identifiers are possible:timeout
-
An integer that is the time in seconds that the host will allow an idle connection to remain open before it is closed. A connection is idle if no data is sent or received by a host. A host may keep an idle connection open for longer than
timeout
seconds, but the host should attempt to retain a connection for at leasttimeout
seconds. max
-
An integer that is the maximum number of requests that can be sent on this connection before closing it. Unless
0
, this value is ignored for non-pipelined connections as another request will be sent in the next response. An HTTP pipeline can use it to limit the pipelining.
Examples
A response containing a Keep-Alive
header:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Connection: Keep-Alive
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
Date: Thu, 11 Aug 2016 15:23:13 GMT
Keep-Alive: timeout=5, max=200
Last-Modified: Mon, 25 Jul 2016 04:32:39 GMT
Server: Apache
(body)
Specifications
Specification |
---|
HTTP/1.1 # compatibility.with.http.1.0.persistent.connections |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser