(Question edited b/c I have realized it involves file type)
This file is 20kb. It is consistently taking > 1 second to serve.
http://www.adrenalinemobility.com/js/ss-symbolicons.js
Here is the same file with .css as it's extension:
http://www.adrenalinemobility.com/js/ss-symbolicons.css
It serves almost 1 whole second faster.
Here is my app.yaml:
application: adrenaline-website
version: 1
api_version: 1
runtime: python27
threadsafe: true
libraries:
- name: jinja2
version: latest
handlers:
- url: /favicon\.ico
static_files: assets/favicon.ico
upload: assets/favicon\.ico
- url: /css
static_dir: assets/css
- url: /img
static_dir: assets/img
- url: /js
static_dir: assets/js
- url: /.*
script: web.APP
I've also tried this static_files
line (before the /js handler), and it was slow too:
- url: /js/ss-symbolicons.js
static_files: assets/js/ss-symbolicons.js
upload: assets/js/ss-symbolicons.js
Ways I have observed this:
- Chrome, Firefox (both on Linux) - from a DSL connection in Silicon Valley
- wget, curl, etc from that machine.
- Remotely wget and curl from a high-speed server at the University of Illinois
- Remote web testing services like webpagetest (see below):
Here's a webpagetest waterfall graph that illustrates this problem - notice the one file has a huge TTFB: http://www.webpagetest.org/result/131101_ZQ_ZGQ/1/details/
If i manually set the mime_type to text
, then it goes fast. application/javascript
, application/x-javascript
, text/javascript
are all slow. Currently those files are serving without manually specified mime-type if you wish to test.
Some more info, as noticed by jchu:
The slow version serves with: Content-Length: 19973
and the fast version serves with: Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Still more details:
I usually get server 74.125.28.121
. Someone on reddit got server 173.194.71.121
and it seems to have even serving speeds between them. So maybe it's server/location dependent?
Here is a pastebin with full curl logs of requests for both files
static_file
handlers.static_dir
handler - I assume it should be as fast? I just don't believe that > 1 second to begin serving a static file is acceptable - something must be wrong.