type Preconnect =
| Array<
| string
| {
href: string;
crossorigin?: boolean;
}
>
| undefined;undefinedInjects <link rel="preconnect"> tags into the HTML file.
The preconnect keyword for the rel attribute of the <link> element is a hint to browsers that the user is likely to need resources from the target resource's origin, and therefore the browser can likely improve the user experience by preemptively initiating a connection to that origin.
Preconnecting speeds up future loads from a given origin by preemptively performing part or all of the handshake (DNS+TCP for HTTP, and DNS+TCP+TLS for HTTPS origins).
<link rel="preconnect"> will provide a benefit to any future cross-origin HTTP request, navigation or subresource. It has no benefit on same-origin requests because the connection is already open.
If a page needs to make connections to many third-party domains, preconnecting them all can be counterproductive. The <link rel="preconnect"> hint is best used for only the most critical connections. For the others, just use <link rel="dns-prefetch"> to save time on the first step — the DNS lookup.
export default {
performance: {
preconnect: ['https://example.com/'],
},
};The generated HTML tag is:
<link ref="preconnect" href="https://example.com" />stringundefinedSpecify the URL to preconnect to.
export default {
performance: {
// Equivalent to `preconnect: ['https://example.com/'],`
preconnect: [
{
href: 'https://example.com/',
},
],
},
};booleanfalseSpecify whether to add the crossorigin attribute.
export default {
performance: {
preconnect: [
{
href: 'https://example.com/',
crossorigin: true,
},
],
},
};The generated HTML tag is:
<link rel="preconnect" href="https://example.com" crossorigin />
Refer to this link to understand the use cases of the crossorigin attribute.