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Bibek
Bibek

Posted on • Originally published at blog.bibekkakati.me

Short Polling vs Long Polling

Hello everyone👋

Before proceeding, I am assuming, you are aware of the request-response architecture of a basic web application. To build a real-time application like a chat application we can't use the basic request-response architecture, but we can use it with a polling mechanism to achieve the real-time behaviour. Apart from the polling mechanism we also have SSE(server-side event) and WebSocket to achieve real-time behaviour.

In this article, I am going to discuss two types of polling techniques i.e, long polling and short polling.

First, we need to know, what is polling?

Polling

Polling is a technique in which the client sends a request to the server asking for data in an interval of time.

The response from the server can be empty or any kind of data.

Short Polling

Short Polling is a technique in which the client sends a request to the server asking for data at fixed delays after getting a response from the previously sent request.

  • Client sends a request to the Server.
  • Server responds with an empty response or data, if available.
  • Client will wait for the specified delay after receiving the response and continues the same request-response process again.

This technique is very simple and doesn't consume server resources, but event notifications are not so instant and there will be some delay.

Example

A client sends a request to the server asking for data, but the data is not available at that time and the server responds with an empty response.

The client will wait for 5 seconds before sending the next request. That means if, in that interval of time (5 seconds), any data is available the client will not be notified about this.

The client will be able to get the data when it sends the next request.

So this technique is not so instant, and there will some delay.

Long Polling

Long Polling is a technique in which the client sends a request to the server asking for data, but the server doesn't respond instantly if no data is available, rather it waits for a specific amount of time. If in that interval of time, any event happens or data become available, the server will respond with that data and in case of no events or data, the server will respond with an empty response after the specified timeout.

This technique is more complex and does consume server resources, but it can notify the client without any delay so it can give a better real-time experience.


Originally published on blog.bibekkakati.me


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Top comments (1)

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gaurang847 profile image
Gaurang

Great post! Can you please give some examples on when I would want to use which?

Also, what according to you would be sensible durations for short polling and long polling? And what would be a sensible timeout duration in case of long polling?