I want to set a favicon to be requested from a static file server instead of the main web server for performance optimization.
If I specify a <link rel="shortcut icon" href="http://cdn.site.com/favicon.ico">
but also have a /favicon.ico
in my site root as a fallback, which will browsers prefer? Will browsers (and which?) still look for /favicon.ico
, making the move to a static file server useless?
I did the test suggested above. I placed a /favicon.ico in the root of a domain, and a link, and fired up the page in:
They all showed the icon loaded with
<link rel="shortcut icon" href="http://cdn.site.com/favicon.ico">
(located on an external server). I checkedaccess.log
, and there were no requests to/favicon.ico
!I then commented out the
<link>
, checked again in all browsers, and they showed the/favicon.ico
icon and corresponding entries inaccess.log
.The answer is: the link should trump the local file on most modern browsers, but it really depends on the implementation with non-mainstream browsers (although you probably don't really care about other browsers than IE, Firefox, Safari and Chrome)
It should also be pretty simple to test this yourself. Just put the
favicon.ico
file in the site folder and also add a link to a different-looking icon file on the static server and then see which one is loaded in different browsers.Don't forget that browsers aren't the only thing that will request favicon's - many crawlers and other applications do too.