Disabling HTTP/2 / SPDY in HTTP.SYS and IIS in Windows 10

MarkB_V picture MarkB_V · Jul 30, 2015 · Viewed 20.3k times · Source

When testing on Windows 10 we were seeing lots of browser incompatibilities that I hadn't seen before with earlier Windows versions. Some browsers would work, but others would report ERR_SPDY_PROTOCOL_ERROR. My quick search for this problem showed I was not alone.

My app uses WWSAPI and HTTP.SYS with HTTPS (TLS). Does anyone know how to disable SPDY / HTTP/2 in WWSAPI (which is using HTTP.SYS) on Windows 10?

I'd also love to get a full up-to-date Windows 10 list of registry settings for HTTP.SYS.

See below for my answer to this. Hope this helps others too.

Mark

Answer

Jan Willem B picture Jan Willem B · Aug 12, 2015

EDIT: disabling HTTP/2 will significantly slow down the speed of your website, this is not a permanent solution. The problem turned out to be caused by our webapp sending a wrong authentication header to the server.

To still disable HTTP/2, see below.

(OP gave a helpful answer, but in the question. I moved the answer):

I did work around my HTTP/2 problem by configuring Windows 10 HTTP.SYS in the registry to disable HTTP/2. Given that I didn't find info anywhere, I thought I'd share my solution to that problem here too. I would like to find a way of doing this through WWSAPI though.

If I turned off SPDY support in the client browser, it would work but I wanted to turn this off at the server side (HTTP.SYS on Windows 10) so that it wouldn't negotiate HTTP/2 but would use the older more compatible HTTP(S).

Discovered two new registry settings for HTTP.SYS in:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\HTTP\Parameters

  • EnableHttp2Tls REG_DWORD 0
  • EnableHttp2Cleartext REG_DWORD 0

Adding these values and setting both to 0 in Windows 10 resulted in HTTP/2 / SPDY not being negotiated and my ERR_SPDY_PROTOCOL_ERROR problems went away without requiring browser configuration changes. I'm not suggesting there is anything wrong with Windows 10 HTTP/2, the problems may be with certain browsers.

This may work for IIS too, but I don't use that so I haven't tried and in any case there may be a better way to do this in IIS.

Hope this helps others too.

I can confirm this helps for IIS too, but I had to restart my computer.