prefetchDNS
prefetchDNS
lets you eagerly look up the IP of a server that you expect to load resources from.
prefetchDNS("https://example.com");
Reference
prefetchDNS(href)
To look up a host, call the prefetchDNS
function from react-dom
.
import { prefetchDNS } from 'react-dom';
function AppRoot() {
prefetchDNS("https://example.com");
// ...
}
The prefetchDNS function provides the browser with a hint that it should look up the IP address of a given server. If the browser chooses to do so, this can speed up the loading of resources from that server.
Parameters
href
: a string. The URL of the server you want to connect to.
Returns
prefetchDNS
returns nothing.
Caveats
- Multiple calls to
prefetchDNS
with the same server have the same effect as a single call. - In the browser, you can call
prefetchDNS
in any situation: while rendering a component, in an effect, in an event handler, and so on. - In server-side rendering or when rendering Server Components,
prefetchDNS
only has an effect if you call it while rendering a component or in an async context originating from rendering a component. Any other calls will be ignored. - If you know the specific resources you’ll need, you can call other functions instead that will start loading the resources right away.
- There is no benefit to prefetching the same server the webpage itself is hosted from because it’s already been looked up by the time the hint would be given.
- Compared with
preconnect
,prefetchDNS
may be better if you are speculatively connecting to a large number of domains, in which case the overhead of preconnections might outweigh the benefit.
Usage
Prefetching DNS when rendering
Call prefetchDNS
when rendering a component if you know that its children will load external resources from that host.
import { prefetchDNS } from 'react-dom';
function AppRoot() {
prefetchDNS("https://example.com");
return ...;
}
Prefetching DNS in an event handler
Call prefetchDNS
in an event handler before transitioning to a page or state where external resources will be needed. This gets the process started earlier than if you call it during the rendering of the new page or state.
import { prefetchDNS } from 'react-dom';
function CallToAction() {
const onClick = () => {
prefetchDNS('http://example.com');
startWizard();
}
return (
<button onClick={onClick}>Start Wizard</button>
);
}