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Today, when I was using Google+ in two separate browsers, I posted something with one browser. The post almost instantly appeared on the second browser (there was maybe 0.5 seconds of delay). How does Google achieve this? Do they constantly send AJax requests to check for new posts? Wouldn't this put a lot of strain on the server?

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4 Answers 4

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There are a variety of methods can be used to do this:

  • Websockets
  • AJAX Long-Polling
  • page timers
  • iframes

Each one has it's own caveats and possibilities.

If you're interested in being able to do a real-time application, you might have a look at socket.io which is a great abstraction library for all of these technologies, so it'll use the one which is best supported in your browser.

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Can't say how Google does it exactly for sure, but they would have to be using some sort of push technology. HTML5 WebSockets is something that can do this in newer browsers. In older browsers that don't support websockets, the client usually polls the server periodically. See socket.io for a neat cross-browser implementation of WebSockets, with fallbacks to other methods if the browser doesn't support it, documented here.

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I suppose one technique they could use is to send an AJAX request immediately and then block it on the server side until a timeout or content is available to be sent.

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    That's called "long polling". The callback on your success immediately re-initiates the call. The server keeps it open until there is data to send back down the channel.
    – tkone
    Mar 14, 2012 at 21:58
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For years google was using Comet or Reverse Ajax: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet_(programming))

However, I believe they are using HTML5 WebSocket now that the API is ready: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebSocket/

http://dev.w3.org/html5/websockets/

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