I may have rather serendipitously implemented HTTP/3 support for a Flask-like CMS.
Does HTTP/3 reduce server requests by concatenating multi-resource requests into a single request conveyed through a "chained-path"?
For example:
Loading example.com/about requires loading style.css and favicon.ico.
HTTP/2 would request example.com/about, request style.css, request favicon.ico.
Does HTTP/3: request example.com/about & style.css & favicon.ico with a single request path similar to "/about/style.css/favicon.png"?
Any insight would be appreciated. Thanks!
No. HTTP/3 can multiplex requests, but "/about/style.css/favicon.png" is a single, valid path. If you are seeing requests for that (specifically), then it's probably a bug.
As for HTTP/3 itself, NGINX is probably providing that. Mobile connections (well, really any connection that is prone to packet loss) benefits greatly from HTTP/3, which accounts for your speedup.
HTTP/3 also will use UDP streams in addition to the single TCP stream of HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2.