Animated gif only loops once in Chrome and Firefox

Ryan picture Ryan · Jun 3, 2012 · Viewed 55.7k times · Source

I have an animated gif that I want to display any time a page is loading. When I view the image outside of a browser, the image loops infinitely and works just fine, but whenever I'm displaying the image in a browser, the animation only loops once. Does anyone have any suggestions for making the image loop infinitely?

Currently I'm just doing this to make the image appear which does make it appear, but only loops once:

document.getElementById('ajaxloader').innerHTML = 
    '<img src="images/ajax-loader.gif" title="Loading, please wait..">';

Answer

Spektre picture Spektre · Jun 28, 2016

I was facing the same problem with my GIF encoder/decoder class I wrote some time ago (and improving with time to time). I found out the solution for this just yesterday. The GIF is completely fine the problem is on modern internet browser's side. Infected browsers are Opera,IE,Chrome (didn't test others).

After some investigation on the matter (by comparing looping and non looping images) I found out that these browsers GIF decoders are ignoring the looping parameters in GIF file. Instead they are depending on undocumented application extension in the first frame of GIF file.

So the solution is to add this extension command just before first frame image data. Add this chunk:

0x21,0xFF,0x0B,"NETSCAPE","2.0",0x03,0x01,0x00,0x00,0x00

This will force browsers to loop endlessly.

Here example:

looping

Hex view so you see how it is added:

hex

The GIF is not sensitive on inserting/reordering non image chunks of data so you can insert this before first image on any place between any other extension. I put it directly after header + palette. Which can be done with C++ or any other language. (no re-encoding is needed). For more info see:


[Edit by Reed Dunkle]

You can also do it manually with a Hex Editor. I used "Hex Fiend" on macOS Sierra.

Search for 21 F9 in the beginning portions of hex (this is the header). In the photo above, it is 21 F9 04 04 00 00 00 00. Yours could be slightly different, but notice it comes before 2C, which marks the beginning of an image block.

Before the 21 F9... portion, insert the following hex, marked as the "application extension" in the photo above:

21 FF 0B 4E 45 54 53 43 41 50 45 32 2E 30 03 01 00 00 00

Save, and test it.

Addon by Spektre: Beware 21 F9 marks gfx extension chunk which is optional so It may not be present for all or any frames (but that is really rare these days)