I am using Firefox, but I'd like to know how browsers decide this in general.
It seems that when I access the same URL twice in a short amount of time, my browser tries to re-use the TCP same connection for both requests (this is called keep-alive). However, when I access two different URLs (but still served by the same server), the browser sometimes decides to open up a new connection for each request. Obviously, the browser does not use a one-connection-per-URL policy.
I am asking this because I am trying to implement a web service that uses long polling. I can imagine that a user might want to open this service in multiple tabs on the same browser. However, with keep-alive, the second long poll request does not get sent until the first one completes (at least in Firefox), because the browser is trying to shove both of them into the same socket, which I did not expect when I designed the service. Even if the browser implements pipe-lining, there is no way that I can respond to the second request before I respond to the first, because HTTP mandates that I complete the responses in order.
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