Enhanced HTTP/3 request cancellation visibility
Cloudflare now provides more accurate visibility into HTTP/3 client request cancellations, giving you better insight into real client behavior and reducing unnecessary load on your origins.
Previously, when an HTTP/3 client cancelled a request, the cancellation was not always actioned immediately. This meant requests could continue through the CDN — potentially all the way to your origin — even after the client had abandoned them. In these cases, logs would show the upstream response status (such as 200 or a timeout-related code) rather than reflecting the client cancellation.
Now, Cloudflare terminates cancelled HTTP/3 requests immediately and accurately logs them with a 499 status code.
When HTTP/3 clients cancel requests, Cloudflare now immediately reflects this in your logs with a 499 status code. This gives you:
- More accurate traffic analysis: Understand exactly when and how often clients cancel requests.
- Clearer debugging: Distinguish between true errors and intentional client cancellations.
- Better availability metrics: Separate client-initiated cancellations from server-side issues.
Cloudflare now terminates cancelled requests faster, which means:
- Less wasted compute: Your origin no longer processes requests that clients have already abandoned.
- Lower bandwidth usage: Responses are no longer generated and transmitted for cancelled requests.
- Improved efficiency: Resources are freed up to handle active requests.
You may notice an increase in 499 status codes for HTTP/3 traffic. For HTTP/3, a 499 indicates the client cancelled the request stream ↗ before receiving a complete response — the underlying connection may remain open. This is a normal part of web traffic.
Tip: If you use 499 codes in availability calculations, consider whether client-initiated cancellations should be excluded from error rates. These typically represent normal user behavior — such as closing a browser, navigating away from a page, mobile network drops, or cancelling a download — rather than service issues.
For more information, refer to Error 499.
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