Chrome slow over https sites, particularly internal ones

Chrome has an awesome built-in diagnostic tool, "about:net-internals", which is designed to help troubleshoot network problems. In particular, it has an "Events" tab which lets you specify a URL and then Chrome breaks down the entire process of loading it, step-by-step, including DNS resolution, cache hits, and AJAX element requests.


tl;dr Check how Chrome handles certificate checking and revocation.

We had a very similar issue at a facility I previously worked at, but with Firefox. For this to be an issue, you need to confirm the issue is only with https pages. If not, it will make little difference.

With Firefox (I know, I know, I can read, point forthcoming), a bunch of people had issues while Internet Explorer users (if you can believe it) did not. We had used the infamous ipsCA authority because they were free for educational institutions, but eventually pissed off Firefox with their shadiness and OCSP checking of their certs was the culprit. Turns out the browser was delaying because of processing Certificate Revocation Lists because of the nature of our SSL certs. You obviously, as the best of us, did not mention your Chrome version, so it hard to say if it was an issue or is still an issue. However, I would check CRL configuration in Chrome. Doing so in Firefox alleviated out issue. Also, check your certs are in good-standing, that is if they are self-signed. What gave it away to use is we moved away from self-signed because idiot users of our services whined a lot and it was free. We thought we were saving ourselves a headache, but we made it worse.


We deployed Google Chrome internally, to support a custom developed application (on ASP.NET MVC) but running on normal HTTP.

We also had issues with slow pages because of the cache. It seems Chrome was pulling all the static files on every page load, and not saving them in its cache. We ended up simply adding expires headers to our app to force the cache on, and that worked.

You could go down that route (modify your web applications to specify caching strategy for each type of file), or investigate further Chrome's default caching behavior.

Others seem to have similar problems (e.g. http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/Chrome/thread?tid=741fd9e03cfb7e7b&hl=en).

This article may be useful as it provides a primer on Chrome caching: http://gent.ilcore.com/2011/02/chromes-10-caches.html