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Troubleshoot general performance problems with Azure Front Door

Performance problems can originate in several potential areas: the Azure Front Door service, the origin, the requesting client, or the path between any of these hops. This troubleshooting guide helps you identify which hop along the data path is most likely the root of a problem, and how to resolve the problem.

Check for known problems

Before you start, check for any known problems on:

  • The Azure Front Door platform.
  • Internet service providers (ISPs) in the path.
  • The requesting client's ability to connect and retrieve data.

Scenario 1: Investigate the origin

If one of the origin servers is slow, then the first request for an object via Azure Front Door is slow. Further, if the content isn't cached at the Azure Front Door point of presence (POP), requests are forwarded to the origin. Serving from the origin negates the benefit of the POP's proximity and local delivery to the requesting client and instead relies on the origin's performance.

Scenario 1: Environment information needed

  • Azure Front Door endpoint name
    • Endpoint host name
    • Endpoint custom domain (if applicable)
    • Origin host name
  • Full URL of the affected file

Scenario 1: Troubleshooting steps

  1. Check the response headers from the affected request.

    To check response headers, use the following curl examples in Bash. You can also use your browser's developer tools by selecting the F12 key. Select the Networking tab, select the relevant file to be investigated, and then select the Headers tab. If the file is missing, reload the page with the developer tools open.

    The initial response should have an x-cache header with a TCP_MISS or CONFIG_NOCACHE value. The Azure Front Door POP forwards requests with this value to the origin. The origin sends the return traffic on that same path to the requesting client.

    Here's an example that shows TCP_MISS:

    $ curl -I https://www.contoso.com/styles.css
    HTTP/2 200
    date: Wed, 28 Aug 2024 17:02:09 GMT
    content-type: text/css
    content-length: 2837
    last-modified: Thu, 09 May 2024 20:49:36 GMT
    etag: "b15-6180b8e9bd897"
    vary: Accept-Encoding
    x-azure-ref: 20240828T170209Z-AA11BB22CC33DD44EE55FF66AA77BB88CC99DD00
    x-fd-int-roxy-purgeid: 0
    x-cache: TCP_MISS
    accept-ranges: bytes
    

    Here's an example that shows TCP_HIT:

    curl -I https://www.contoso.com/styles.css
    HTTP/2 200
    date: Wed, 28 Aug 2024 17:04:38 GMT
    content-type: text/css
    content-length: 2837
    last-modified: Thu, 09 May 2024 20:49:36 GMT
    etag: "b15-6180b8e9bd897"
    vary: Accept-Encoding
    x-azure-ref: 20240828T170438Z-BB22CC33DD44EE55FF66AA77BB88CC99DD00EE11
    x-fd-int-roxy-purgeid: 0
    x-cache: TCP_HIT
    x-cache-info: L1_T2
    accept-ranges: bytes
    
  2. Continue to request against the endpoint until the x-cache header has a TCP_HIT value.

    If you initially saw CONFIG_NOCACHE, then caching is not enabled in the route configuration. In this case, you will not see TCP_HIT.

  3. If the performance problem is resolved, the problem was based on the origin's speed and not the performance of Azure Front Door. The owner needs to address the Azure Front Door cache settings or the origin to improve performance.

    If the problem persists, the source might be the client that's requesting the content or the Azure Front Door service. Move to Scenario 2 to identify the source.

Scenario 2: A single client or location (for example, an ISP) is slow

A single client or location can be slow if there's a bad network route between the requesting client and the Azure Front Door POP. You should rule out any bad route because it affects the distance to the POP, which removes the Azure Front Door POP's proximity benefit.

High latency or low bandwidth could be the result of an ISP problem, if you're using a virtual private network (VPN) or are part of a dispersed corporate network. A corporate network can run all traffic through a central, remote point.

Scenario 2: Environment information needed

  • Azure Front Door endpoint name
    • Endpoint host name
    • Endpoint custom domain (if applicable)
    • Origin host name
  • Full URL of the affected file
  • Requesting client information
    • Requesting client IP
    • Requesting client location
    • Requesting client path to the Azure environment (usually identified with tracert, pathping, or a similar tool)

Scenario 2: Troubleshooting steps

  1. To check the path to the POP, use pathping or a similar tool for 500 packets to check the network route.

    Pathping has a maximum of 250 queries. To test to 500, run the following query twice:

    pathping /q 250 <Full URL of Affected File>
    
  2. Determine if the traffic is taking a path that would add time or travel to a distant region.

    Look for IP, city, or region codes that don't take a reasonable route based on your geography (for example, traffic in Europe is being routed to the United States) or that have an excessive number of hops.

  3. To rule out requesting client settings, test from a different requesting client in the same region.

  4. If you identify additional hops or remote regions, the problem is with the client accessing the Azure Front Door POP and not with the Azure Front Door service itself. The connectivity or VPN provider needs to address hops between endpoints.

    If you don't identify additional hops or remote regions and the content is being served from the cache (x-cache: TCP_HIT), the problem is with the Azure Front Door service. You might need to create a support request. Include a reference to this troubleshooting article and the steps that you took.

Note

When the content is being served from the origin (x-cache: TCP_MISS), see Scenario 1 earlier in this article.

Scenario 3: A website loads slowly

In some scenarios, there's no problem with a single file but the performance of a whole (Azure Front Door proxied) webpage is unsatisfactory. A webpage performance tool shows poor site performance compared to a webpage outside Azure Front Door.

A webpage often consists of many files. A website benefits from Azure Front Door only if Azure Front Door is serving each file on a webpage. You must configure Azure Front Door to maximize the benefit.

Consider the following example:

  • Origin: origin.contoso.com
  • Azure Front Door custom domain: contoso.com
  • Page that you're trying to load: https://contoso.com

When the page loads, the initial file at the "/" directory calls other files, which build the page. These files are images, JavaScript, text files, and more. If those files aren't called via the Azure Front Door host name (contoso.com), the page is not using Azure Front Door. So, if one of the files that the website requests is http://www.images.fabrikam.com/businessimage.jpg, the file is not benefiting from the use of Azure Front Door. Instead, the browser on the requesting client is requesting the file directly from the images.fabrikam.com server.

Diagram of multiple, differently sourced files for a singular website and how that configuration affects Azure Front Door performance.

Scenario 3: Environment information needed

  • Azure Front Door endpoint name
    • Endpoint host name
    • Endpoint custom domain (if applicable)
    • Origin host name
    • Geographical location of the origin
  • Full URL of the affected webpage
  • Tool and metric that are measuring performance

Scenario 3: Troubleshooting

  1. Review the metric that shows the slower performance.

    Important

    Microsoft can't discern what's being measured by tools that it doesn't own.

  2. Open the Azure Front Door webpage in a browser, and then open the developer tools by selecting the F12 key.

    You can use the developer tools in your browser to determine the source of the files being served. To view the request URL in the developer tools, select the Networking tab, select the file that you're investigating, and then select General. If the file is missing, reload the page with the developer tools open.

  3. Note the source, or the request URL, of the files.

  4. Identify which files are using the Azure Front Door host name and which files aren't.

    In the preceding example, an image hosted in Azure Front Door would be https://www.contoso.com/productimage1.jpg. An image not hosted in Azure Front Door would be http://www.images.fabrikam.com/businessimage.jpg.

  5. Test the performance of the file that Azure Front Door is serving, its origin, and (if applicable) the testing webpage.

    If the origin or testing webpage is served from a geographical region closer to the tool that's testing performance, you might need to use a tool or requesting client in another region to examine the Azure Front Door POP's proximity benefit.

    Important

    Any files served from outside the Azure Front Door host name won't benefit from it. You might need to redesign the webpage to do so.

    If files are meant to be cached, be sure to test files that have the response header x-cache: TCP_HIT.

  6. Take action based on the collected data:

    • If the collected data shows that files are being issued from servers outside the Azure Front Door host name, Azure Front Door is working as expected.

      Slowly loading websites might require a change in webpage design. For assistance in optimizing your website to use Azure Front Door, connect with your website design team or with Microsoft solution providers.

      Note

      The problem of slowly loading websites could take time to review, based on the complexity of a website's design and its file-calling instructions.

    • If the collected data shows that the files' loading performance is better at Azure Front Door compared to the origin or test site, Azure Front Door is working as expected. The source of the problem might be individual client requests. In that case, see Scenario 1 earlier in this article.

    • If the collected data shows that performance is not better at Azure Front Door, you likely need to file a support request for further investigation. Include a reference to this troubleshooting article and the steps that you took.