What exactly is the 'Waiting for response' msg on Firebug's Net tab?

Nicolas R picture Nicolas R · Sep 9, 2009 · Viewed 21.3k times · Source

As sou can see from the screenshot most of the time spent is waiting for a server response (thats the purple coloured area).

What exactly is that server response time? Is the server too slow? Is my connection too slow? Can't the server process much information at once (I've got many files there, I know I'll combine them to fewer)? What do I have to do to minimise that waiting time?

PS. all the data are on the same server but I'm using subdomains so that the browser can process more files at once.

firebug net tab

Answer

Pascal MARTIN picture Pascal MARTIN · Sep 9, 2009

This article is quite nice about features of firebug : Introduction to Firebug: Net Panel (especially the timeline section)... But it doesn't say much about what "waiting for response" exactly means :-(

Still, the timeline is (quoting) :

  • DNS Lookup - DNS resolution time
  • Connection - elapsed time required to create a TCP connection
  • Queuing - elapsed time spent in a browser queue waiting for a network connection
  • Waiting For Response - waiting for a response from the server
  • Receiving Data - elapsed time required to read entire response from the server (and/or time required to read from cache).
  • DomContentLoaded event - time when DomContentLoad event was fired (since the beginning of the request, can be negative if the request has been started after the event)
  • load event - time when page load event was fired (since the beginning of the request, can be negative if the request has been started after the event)


So, I'm guessing that the "waiting for response" period is the time during which the browser has sent the request to the server, and has not received any response yet : it is "waiting" for some content beginning to arrive :

  • the browser is no longer waiting for the network connection : the request is sent
  • and the browser is not yet reading response from the server.


In the case of a server generating the whole page before beginning sending it to the browser, I suppose the "waiting for response" time would be correspond to :

  • time for the request to travel from the browser to the server
  • plus time for the request to be processed by the server (ie, time to generate the whole page)
  • plus time for the first byte of data traveling from the server to the browser.


Hope this helps :-)