Around 46.5% of websites support HTTP/2.
It has many features like:
HTTP Header Compression Push technologies Load page elements in parallel over a single TCP connection Binary protocol Reduced latency
Demo by AKAMAI shows HTTP/2 is approximately two times faster than HTTP/1.1.
Did you know LiteSpeed was one of the first web servers to support HTTP/2? If you use a CDN like Cloudflare, Incapsula, MaxCDN, you may not need to enable HTTP/2 in your web servers as you can do it from CDN network edge. However, if you need to implement HTTP/2 in your web servers like Apache, Nginx, IIS, read on to learn how you can do it. Note: All leading browsers (Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Safari, Opera) must use TLS 1.2 or newer for HTTP2 implementation. But don’t worry if you are doing some experiments. You can get the TLS certificate for FREE.
Implement HTTP/2 in Apache HTTP
HTTP/2 can be deployed in Apache HTTP 2.4.17 or later version with the help of mod_http2 module. So if you have a 2.2 or lower version, you first have to upgrade to the compatible version. Let’s compile Apache HTTP with the mod_http2, mod_ssl module.
Download the latest version (I’ll do 2.4.25 on Linux) Extract the downloaded file, if you downloaded the .gz file, then
You will see a new folder create. Go inside that Build the Apache from source with configure command
Note: if you are trying this on a brand new server, you may encounter an error to install dependencies, and this guide should help you with that.
Ensure no error from above command once done, execute the following make command
This concludes Apache HTTP is installed with HTTP/2 module and it’s time to do the necessary configuration.
Take a backup of httpd.conf file (default location /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf) Open the httpd.conf file with vi and ensure the following exists; if not, then add it.
Next, you need to add the Protocols directive like below
If you are enabling HTTP/2 for an individual virtual host, you need to add Protocols under the respective VIrtualHost. Note: there are three parameters in the above Protocols directive
h2 – instructing Apache to support HTTP/2 protocol over SSL/TLS h2c – instructing Apache to support HTTP/2 over TCP http/1.1 – if a client doesn’t accept HTTP/2 then serve the request over HTTP/1.1
Restart Apache HTTP server to reload the configuration. Now, Apache HTTP instance is enabled to support HTTP/2 protocol.
Implement HTTP/2 in Nginx
Nginx 1.9.5 or higher version supports HTTP/2, so first, you have to ensure you have the compatible version installed. Enabling HTTP/2 in Nginx is just a matter of adding the http2 parameter in listen directive.
As usual, take a backup of nginx.conf file (default location /etc/nginx/nginx.conf) Modify using vi and add http2 under listen directive
As I mentioned above, HTTP/2 is supported only over HTTPS, so you got to add under server block which has SSL configuration. If your SSL configuration is in a file other nginx.conf, you must update it there. Once done, restart the Nginx for configuration to be active.
Verify if Website Supports HTTP/2
There are multiple ways to check if the website supports HTTP/2 or not. Manually – open IE/Chrome/Firefox and press F12 » go to the Network tab, and you should see Protocol as HTTP/2.
Online – you can use the HTTP/2 Test tool. That’s all for today. I hope above helps you to enable HTTP/2 protocol in Apache and Nginx web servers for fast-loading web pages.