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New HTTP dropped two months ago: datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc9114/ http3 build on "quic" on top of udp. Kinda interesting. Snarky analysis is just that with site's so crammed with ads vendors want faster ways to ship them. Solution should be ad blocker 😎
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Less snarky thoughts are just interested in the trend away from TCP and more serialization. Will need to read more, curious what this offers on top of HTTP2/spdy multi fetch
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TCP provides the semantics of a stream so HTTP/2 multiplexing everything over 1 connection makes that all get tied together. Data is received in the order it was sent as one stream. It depends on having extremely good congestion control and properly controlled minimal buffers.
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Probably want to set net.ipv4.tcp_notsent_lowat lower than 128k if you actually want HTTP/2 prioritization to work though. Consider a client starting up transfers for a dozen images and then wanting a higher prioritize resource. Server will have filled huge buffers with images.
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QUIC provides support for concurrent streams / messages within a connection with different priorities at the transport and encryption layers by replacing TCP and TLS. Opening many TCP connections consumes too many resources, is unfair to other applications and they start slowly.
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Download managers use 128 connections instead of 1 because most queuing is totally unfair or at best has fairness across connections (fq_codel), unlike CAKE which does fairness across hosts on either end and then connections. Browsers were doing it pre-HTTP/2, not intentionally.
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