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Does it actually matter which CDN you use to link to your jquery file or any javascript file for that matter. Is one potentially faster than the other? What other factors could play a role in which cdn you decide to use? I know that Microsoft, Yahoo, and Google all have CDN's now.

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17 Answers 17

152

Update based on comments:

Short version: It doesn't matter much, but it may depend on what they host. They all host different things: Google doesn't host jQuery.Validate, Microsoft did not host jQuery-UI, since 2016 they do!!, Microsoft offers their scripts that would otherwise be served via ScriptResource.axd and an easier integration (e.g. ScriptManager with ASP.Net 4.0).

Important Note: If you're building an intranet application, stay away from the CDN approach. It doesn't matter who's hosting it, unless you're on a very overloaded server internally, no CDN will give you more performance than local 100mb/1GB ethernet will. If you use a CDN for a strictly internal application you're hurting performance. Set your cache expiration headers correctly and ignore CDNs exist in the intranet-only scenario.

The chances of either being blocked seems to be about equal, almost zero. I have worked on contracts where this isn't true, but it seems to be an exception. Also, since the original posting of this answer, the context surrounding it has changed greatly, the Microsoft CDN has made a lot of progress.

The project I'm currently on uses both CDNs which works best for our solution. Several factors play into this. Users with an older browser are still probably making 2 simultaneous requests per domain as recommended by the HTTP specification. This isn't an issue for anyone running anything decently new that supports pipelining (every current browser), but based on another factor we're knocking out this limitation as well, at least as far as the javascript.

Google's CDN we're using for:

Microsoft's CDN we're using for:

Our server:

  • Combined.js?v=2.2.0.6190 (Major.Minor.Iteration.Changeset)

Since part of our build process is combining and minifying all custom javascript, we do this via a custom script manager that includes the release or debug (non-minified) versions of these scripts depending on the build. Since Google doesn't host the jQuery validation package, this can be a down-side. MVC is including/using this in their 2.0 release, so you could rely completely on Microsoft's CDN for all your needs, and all of it automatic via the ScriptManager.

The only other argument to be made would be DNS times, there is a cost to this in terms of page load speed. On Average: Simply because it's used more (it's been around longer) ajax.googleapis.com is likely to be returned by DNS sooner than ajax.microsoft.com, simply because the local DNS server was more likely to get a request for it (this is a first user in the area penalty). This is a very minor thing and should only be considered if performance is extremely important, down to the millisecond.
(Yes: I realize this point is contrary to my using both CDNs, but in our case the DNS time is far overshadowed by the wait time on the javascript/blocking that occurs)

Last, if you haven't looked at it, one of the best tools out there is Firebug, and some plug-ins for it: Page Speed and YSlow. If you use a CDN but your pages are requesting images every time because of no cache-headers, you're missing the low-hanging fruit. Firebug's Net panel can quickly give you a quick breakdown of your page load-time, and Page Speed/YSlow can offer some good suggestions to help.

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    Less likely to be blocked? I'd love to know how you came up with that idea. The MS network isn't MS's anyway, it's akamai's who have been doing load balanced servers for a lot longer than google has, which makes a nonsense of the "better fall-over system" as well. Really, if you're going to make claims like this some evidence would be nice.
    – blowdart
    Oct 11, 2009 at 11:02
  • 16
    Some companies, and I've worked for a few, block *.microsoft.com outright as part of their blocking of windows update. Is this correct? No, does it happen? Yes. Example: ajax.microsoft.com/...it falls under the *.microsoft.com block and not under the www exception, it's blocked when a company chooses to block anything but www.microsoft.com. I didn't say it's very likely, I said it's more likely, as I've never seen google blocked but have seen the reverse. Oct 11, 2009 at 12:13
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    And I've seen google blocked to stop gmail at government sites. But as it's so rare, I would hardly attempt to use it as a justification in this case.
    – blowdart
    Oct 11, 2009 at 13:08
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    Since this was written, MS have added jQuery-UI to their CDN: asp.net/ajaxlibrary/cdn.ashx#Using_jQuery_UI_from_the_CDN_10
    – Will Dean
    Oct 6, 2010 at 7:04
  • 3
    @Nick Microsoft has moved it's CDN from ajax.microsoft.com to ajax.aspnetcdn.com. So there's no chance of blocking Microsoft's CDN as a part of blocking Windows Updates. Aug 8, 2013 at 10:22
89

You should absolutely use the Google CDN for jQuery (and this is coming from a Microsoft-centric developer).

It's simple statistics. Those who would consider using the MS CDN for jQuery will always be a minority. There are too many non-MS developers using jQuery who will use Google's and wouldn't consider using Microsoft's. Since one of the big wins with a public CDN is improved caching, splitting usage among multiple CDNs decreases the potential for that benefit.

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    if we keep thinking that way then only bigger will get to breath. Don't just use google because it's google and assume everyone is with them(no doubt most are with them). But let best win, compare result and go with them.
    – mamu
    Aug 19, 2010 at 5:01
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    It's not an assumption. Sites in the Alexa top 200,000 using Google's CDN outnumber Microsoft's over 100:1. In terms of popularity for caching, the only point in favor of the MS jQuery CDN is that Microsoft.com uses it, which gives it a lot of exposure from that one reference alone (but not as much as the thousands of top sites referencing Google's).
    – Dave Ward
    Aug 22, 2010 at 15:31
  • @DaveWard, can you verify this is still the case, or have the tables turned somewhat over the last few years?
    – snumpy
    Apr 26, 2013 at 16:41
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    @snumpy: The Google CDN has stretched its lead quite a bit from what I've seen. There's nothing wrong with the Microsoft CDN. It's fast and has a few files that the Google one doesn't. The cross-site caching benefit is dependent on net-wide coverage though, and Google's dominates all others in that regard.
    – Dave Ward
    Apr 26, 2013 at 17:35
  • Because I've switched from jQuery CDN to Microeoft's for hosting jQuery Mobile, I moved my other jQuery downloads to it from Google to reduce the number of DNS roundtrips. Just another factor :)
    – Rob Grant
    Jan 7, 2014 at 14:43
20

Google will send you a jQuery version minified with their own software, this version is 6kb lighter than the standard minified version served by MS. Go for Google.

18

One minor thing to consider is that both companies offer slightly different "extra" libraries:

Depending on your needs, this may be relevant.

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15

It should also be noted that as ajax.microsoft.com is a sub domain of microsoft.com requests send all microsoft.com cookies adding to the overall time it takes to get the file back.

Also, ajax.microsoft.com is using default IIS7 compression which is inferior to the standard compression that other web servers use.

http://ajax.microsoft.com/ajax/jquery/jquery-1.4.4.min.js - 33.4K

http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.4/jquery.min.js - 26.5K

Also, as others have mentioned google CDN is way more popular which greatly increases the chance of a file being cached.

So I strongly recommend using google.

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    This was a good objection at the time, but no longer applies as the recommended CDN domain name is now ajax.aspnetcdn.com. The blocking of *.microsoft.com objection also no longer applies. Apr 13, 2011 at 13:56
  • this is true. glad they finally fixed this part of it. Now I don't feel so bad about including jquery validate / cycle plugin from the ms cdn.
    – Alistair
    Jul 20, 2011 at 7:59
  • Cookies thing also no longer applies because of switch to aspnetcdn.
    – Rob Grant
    Jan 7, 2014 at 14:44
11

It probably doesn't matter, but you could validate this with some A/B testing. Send half of your traffic to one CDN, and half to the other, and set up some profiling to measure the response. I would think it more important to be able to switch easily in case one or the other had some serious unavailability issues.

7

I know I'm chiming in a little late here, but here is the code that I've been using in production. I've never had issues with it, but your mileage may vary. Make sure you test it in your own environment.

<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>    
<script type="text/javascript">
    !window.jQuery && document.write('<script src="/scripts/jquery-1.4.2.min.js"><\/script>')
</script>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.8.4/jquery-ui.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
    !window.jQuery.ui && document.write('<script src="/scripts/jquery-ui-1.8.2.min.js"><\/script>')
</script> 
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    Unfortunately some browsers (IE6) won't delay the processing of that online script until after the src= script is loaded so this won't work as expected. Wish it would! Oct 15, 2010 at 4:26
  • 2
    So, your IE6 users experience a slightly slow experience. Good trade-off if you ask me. IE6 is on the decline... even in Corporate intranets. Nov 25, 2010 at 17:58
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Is one potentially faster than the other?

I was actually curious of this myself so I setup a jsbin test page using each of the following and then ran it through webpagetest.org's visual comparison tool. I tested:

  1. ajax.googleapis.com
  2. code.jquery.com
  3. ajax.aspnetcdn.com
  4. cdnjs.cloudflare.com

Who was fastest: code.jquery.com by 0.1 second in both tests

Who was slowest: ajax.aspnetcdn.com by 0.7 seconds in first test and ajax.googleapis.com by 1 second in second test

Here's the 1st test (each was tested 3 times):

Video: http://www.webpagetest.org/video/view.php?id=121019_16c5e25eff2937f63cc1714ed1eac814794e62b3

Reports: http://www.webpagetest.org/video/compare.php?tests=121019_D2_KF0,121019_9Q_KF1,121019_WW_KF2,121019_9K_KF3

Here's the 2nd test (another 3 each):

Video: http://www.webpagetest.org/video/view.php?id=121019_a7b351f706cad2c25664fee7ef349371f17c4e74

Reports: http://www.webpagetest.org/video/compare.php?tests=121019_MP_KJN,121019_S6_KJP,121019_V9_KJQ,121019_VY_KJR

4

As stated by Pingdom:

When someone visits your site, if they have already visited another site that uses the same jQuery file on the same CDN, the file will have been cached and doesn’t need to be downloaded at all. It can’t get any faster than that.

This means that the most widely used CDN will have the odds on its side, which can pay off for your site.

A few observations on performance: Google’s CDN is consistently the slowest of the three both in North America and Europe. In Europe, Microsoft’s CDN is the fastest.

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I think it depends on where is your targeted audience. You can use alertra.com to check both CDN speed from many locations around the world.

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  • This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. Jun 25, 2014 at 15:17
  • 1
    To Fiona, it is my answer to the question. The question is "does it matter", my answer is "it depends on where his target audience is located", and I provided a site to test speed from different places around the world to let him decide which CDN to use. It is not a comment, it's an answer.
    – silent
    Jun 26, 2014 at 20:57
3

One additional consideration - if your site is SSL and you need to support Android 2.1 (or earlier), the SSL certificate on the HTTPS version of the Microsoft CDN will crash those versions of the Android browser, per this issue: http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=5001. It's not Microsoft's "fault", as the SSL certificate is technically valid and the defect is in Android's SSL implementation... but it will crash your site, nonetheless.

The SSL cert on Google's CDN does not fall afoul of this particular issue (relating to the certificate's "Certificate Subject Alt Name").

So, for SSL + Android 2.1 support, use the Google CDN.

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My answer is bit different than others, I will go with microsoft if you need jquery validator which almost everyone need if you are using jquery.

Microsoft CDN http connection is Keep-Alive which is big plus when you are requesting multiple items.

So if you need jquery validation then use Microsoft CDN, even if you need jquery ui use microsoft because google not not keeping keep-alive so every request are on it's own. so mixing in that way is plus. if you are using microsoft only for validator then you are doing seperate connection with google server for each request.

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In the summery it says that microsoft is not offering UI, that is not correct (any more). It can be downloadloade at http://www.asp.net/ajaxlibrary/cdn.ashx.

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Also consider when using Google CDN that some times people make typos such as ajax.googelapis.com. This could potentially create a really nasty xss (cross site scripting) attack. I have actually tested this out by registering a googlapis.com typo and very quickly found myself serving requests for javascript, maps, css etc.

I emailed Google and asked them to register similar CDN typo URL's but have not heard back. This could be a real reason not to rely on CDN's because there are potentially dangerous attackers awaiting the typo requests and can easily serve back jquery etc with an xss payload.

Thank you

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    a little bit off topic maybe, but interesting point.
    – null
    Aug 1, 2012 at 23:48
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Depending which industry the application targets, you may not want to use a CDN managed by other organisations. It often raises issues regarding to compliance, privacy and confidentiality.

For example, when you include Google Analytics in a secure application, the browser still sends the current URL as the "referer" header. Any identifiers, say a session id or secret token may appear in their logs. For example, if a client IP of 192.0.2.5references https://healthsystem.example/condition/impotence, then well, you can infer information which is considered to be rather private.

Other cases include information of consequence, such as an account number, social security number or session information in the URL. That sort of data should never be in the URL as it can be used outside of the application.

While you may trust Google, Microsoft or Yahoo, your users may not.

For industries like Finance, Legal and Health Care, you may want to establish your own CDN with the help of a vendor (e.g. Akamai) with which you can sign a BAA.

1

I would advise that you base your usage on the general location of the users you're targeting.

If your site is targeted for general public, then using Google's CDN would be a good choice.

If your site is also targeted at China, then using Microsoft's CDN would be a better choice. I know from my experience, as Google's servers kept getting blocked by the Chinese government, rendering websites that uses them un-loadable.

*Note that you can of cos create region specific sites, e.g. cn.mysite.com to cater specifically for China, but if you're low on resources and time, its worth a consideration.

Full list of Microsoft CDN here. http://www.asp.net/ajaxlibrary/cdn.ashx

They have since renamed to ajax.aspnetcdn.com, which reduces the likelihood of blockage by firewall rules.

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I would use both!

As the Google Jquery hosting has been around a lot longer, the chances are much higher that people will already have it cached compared to the Microsoft one, so I would have it first.

Personally, I would use something like this -

if (typeof jQuery == 'undefined') {  
    // jQuery is not loaded  

  document.write("<scr" + "ipt type=\"text/javascript\" src=\"http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.3.2/jquery.min.js\"></scr" + "ipt>");
        }
} else {
    // jQuery is loaded
}

(Not sure this 100% works, but I was just going to write the idea and not example - This references the Google hosted Jquery and not the Microsoft one as I couldn't find the link)

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    jQuery will never be defined unless you bring it into your page. Caching the .js file doe snot make it available to all the browser pages by default!
    – Falkayn
    Nov 25, 2009 at 0:29
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    This works :S Re read the script - if it isn't defined, it writes this and loads?
    – Wil
    Nov 25, 2009 at 1:04
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    I've never understood why people do "<scr" + "ipt ..."
    – user47322
    Jan 15, 2010 at 13:36
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    "Depending on the browser, the amount of other preceding javascript, and how well-formed the overall code is, this is done to prevent the parser from interpreting the <script> and </script> tags as executeable code rather than as a string to be written."
    – SeanJA
    Feb 10, 2010 at 23:44
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    The problem is that jQuery will never be defined unless you've actively loaded it. In your script the first branch will always get executed (unless you have another jQuery inclusion above), rendering the script superfluous.
    – jensgram
    Oct 18, 2010 at 6:47

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