Sec-Purpose header
The HTTP Sec-Purpose {{Glossary("fetch metadata request header")}} indicates the purpose for which the requested resource will be used, when that purpose is something other than immediate use by the user-agent.
The only purpose that is currently defined is prefetch, which indicates that the resource is being requested in anticipation that it will be needed by a page that is likely to be navigated to in the near future, such as a page linked in search results or a link that a user has hovered over.
The server can use this knowledge to: adjust the caching expiry for the request, disallow the request, or perhaps to treat it differently when counting page visits.
The header is sent when a page is loaded that has a <link> element with attribute rel="prefetch".
Note that if this header is set then a {{HTTPHeader("Sec-Fetch-Dest")}} header in the request must be set to empty (any value in the <link> attribute as is ignored) and the {{HTTPHeader("Accept")}} header should match the value used for normal navigation requests.
| Header type | `{{Glossary("Fetch Metadata Request Header")}}` |
|---|---|
| `{{Glossary("Forbidden request header")}}` | Yes (Sec- prefix) |
| `{{Glossary("CORS-safelisted request header")}}` | No |
Syntax
Sec-Purpose: prefetch
Directives
The allowed tokens are:
prefetch- : The purpose is to prefetch a resource that may be needed in a probable future navigation.
Examples
A prefetch request
Consider the case where a browser loads a file with a <link> element that has the attribute rel="prefetch" and an href attribute containing the address of an image file.
The resulting fetch() should result in an HTTP request where Sec-Purpose: prefetch, Sec-Fetch-Dest: empty, and an Accept value that is the same as the browser uses for page navigation.
An example of such a header (on Firefox) is given below:
GET /images/some_image.png HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:109.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/116.0
Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,image/avif,image/webp,*/*;q=0.8
Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br
Sec-Purpose: prefetch
Connection: keep-alive
Sec-Fetch-Dest: empty
Sec-Fetch-Mode: no-cors
Sec-Fetch-Site: same-origin
Pragma: no-cache
Cache-Control: no-cache
[!NOTE] At time of writing Firefox incorrectly sets the
Acceptheader asAccept: */*for prefetches. The example has been modified to show what theAcceptvalue should be. This issue can be tracked in Firefox bug 1836334.
Specifications
{{Specifications}}
Browser compatibility
{{Compat}}
See also
{{HTTPHeader("Sec-Fetch-Dest")}},{{HTTPHeader("Sec-Fetch-Mode")}},{{HTTPHeader("Sec-Fetch-Site")}},{{HTTPHeader("Sec-Fetch-User")}}fetch metadata request headers{{Glossary("Prefetch")}}(Glossary)<link>element with attributerel="prefetch"