Identifying IE browser usage correctly
How was IE browser usage being captured?
The user agent string that IE identifies itself with
includes the name and version number. For eg, IE 7 user agent will include MSIE
7.0, IE 8 will include MSIE 8.0 and so forth.
The Splunk query that we used extracted this “name
followed by version” token and derived usage statistics.
Why did my team re-analyze at the browser usage
statistics?
For a particular client, we noticed heavy and
consistent traffic from IE 7.Our Splunk query suggested around 550 users using
IE 7, while the client claimed to have migrated to higher versions of IE.
What was the observation after analysis of raw HTTP
headers sent by IE?
IE 8 onwards Microsoft started shipping every newer version
of IE along with “compatibility mode”. If a page was working in IE 7 and breaks
after IE 8 upgrade, user can switch to “compatibility mode”.
However, in this mode, IE 8 (and all higher versions) user
agent contains name and version as “MSIE 7.0”. Hence, the higher traffic
identified from IE 7.More on this here.
Also, IE 8 onwards Microsoft started including the layout
engine name and version (“Trident”) in the user agent. And thankfully, it sends
that information irrespective of the mode IE is operating in.
How we changed our strategy to identify IE versions?
The Splunk query was modified to include a regex which can
identify:
1.
MSIE – without any “trident” text in the user
agent. This should give us all the “real” IE7 requests
2.
MSIE – mandatorily followed by “trident” text to
indicate version greater than IE7 with or without compatibility mode.
If the request has MSIE 7.0 and Trident both, identify the
IE version using Trident version number. Find that mapping here.
Did the browser usage stats change after this?
Yes! We found out that only one user out of around seven
thousand production users, used IE 7 in last 5 weeks.
Isn't Microsoft awesome?
I’ll leave that to your judgment.
This is very helpful, IE is really weird in its compatibility mode.
ReplyDeleteI am sharing one of my experience
I was testing my website in compatibility mode and I found different results in IE's compatibility mode and actual downgraded version.
In compatible mode its working and its failing to load in downgraded version.
My observation for testing compatibility we should test on actual downgraded version instead of in compatibility mode.
Nice and helpful :)
ReplyDeleteNice read! My experience with IE compatibility mode has been real bad. It is never the same as the actual version!
ReplyDelete