Overview of Google crawlers and fetchers (user agents)
Google uses crawlers and fetchers to perform actions for its products, either automatically or triggered by user request. Crawler (sometimes also called a "robot" or "spider") is a generic term for any program that is used to automatically discover and scan websites. Fetchers act as a program like wget that typically make a single request on behalf of a user. Google's clients fall into three categories:
| Common crawlers | The common crawlers used for Google's products (such as Googlebot). They always respect robots.txt rules for automatic crawls. | 
| Special-case crawlers | Special-case crawlers are similar to common crawlers, however are used by specific products
      where there's an agreement between the crawled site and the Google product about the crawl
      process. For example, AdsBotignores the global robots.txt user agent
      (*) with the ad publisher's permission. | 
| User-triggered fetchers | User-triggered fetchers are part of tools and product functions where the end user triggers a fetch. For example, Google Site Verifier acts on the request of a user. | 
Technical properties of Google's crawlers and fetchers
Google's crawlers and fetchers are designed to be run simultaneously by thousands of machines to improve performance and scale as the web grows. To optimize bandwidth usage, these clients are distributed across many datacenters across the world so they're located near the sites that they might access. Therefore, your logs may show visits from several IP addresses. Google egresses primarily from IP addresses in the United States. In case Google detects that a site is blocking requests from the United States, it may attempt to crawl from IP addresses located in other countries.
Supported transfer protocols
  Google's crawlers and fetchers support HTTP/1.1 and
  HTTP/2. The crawlers will
  use the protocol version that provides the best crawling performance and may switch protocols
  between crawling sessions depending on previous crawling statistics. The default protocol
  version used by Google's crawlers is HTTP/1.1; crawling over HTTP/2 may save computing resources
  (for example, CPU, RAM) for your site and Googlebot, but otherwise
  there's no Google-product specific benefit to the site (for example, no ranking boost in Google Search).
  To opt out from crawling over HTTP/2, instruct the server that's hosting your site to respond
  with a 421 HTTP status code when Google attempts to access your site over
  HTTP/2. If that's not feasible, you
  can send a message to the Crawling team
  (however this solution is temporary).
Google's crawler infrastructure also supports crawling through FTP (as defined by RFC959 and its updates) and FTPS (as defined by RFC4217 and its updates), however crawling through these protocols is rare.
Supported content encodings
  Google's crawlers and fetchers support the following content encodings (compressions):
  gzip,
  deflate, and
  Brotli (br). The
  content encodings supported by each Google user agent is advertised in the
  Accept-Encoding header of each request they make. For example,
  Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br.
Crawl rate and host load
Our goal is to crawl as many pages from your site as we can on each visit without overwhelming your server. If your site is having trouble keeping up with Google's crawling requests, you can reduce the crawl rate. Note that sending the inappropriate HTTP response code to Google's crawlers may affect how your site appears in Google products.
HTTP Caching
  Google's crawling infrastructure supports heuristic HTTP caching as defined by the
  HTTP caching standard,
  specifically through the ETag response- and If-None-Match request
  header, and the Last-Modified response- and If-Modified-Since request
  header.
  If both ETag and Last-Modified response header fields are present in the
  HTTP response, Google's crawlers use the ETag value as
  required by the HTTP standard.
  For Google's crawlers specifically, we recommend using
  ETag
  instead of the Last-Modified header to indicate caching preference as
  ETag doesn't have date formatting issues.
Other HTTP caching directives aren't supported.
  Individual Google crawlers and fetchers may or may not make use of caching, depending on the needs
  of the product they're associated with. For example, Googlebot supports caching when
  re-crawling URLs for Google Search, and Storebot-Google only supports caching in
  certain conditions.
To implement HTTP caching for your site, get in touch with your hosting or content management system provider.
ETag and If-None-Match
  Google's crawling infrastructure supports ETag and If-None-Match as
  defined by the
  HTTP Caching standard.
  Learn more about the
  ETag
  response header and its request header counterpart,
  If-None-Match.
Last-Modified and If-Modified-Since
  Google's crawling infrastructure supports Last-Modified and
  If-Modified-Since as defined by the
  HTTP Caching standard
  with the following caveats:
- 
    The date in the Last-Modifiedheader must be formatted according to the HTTP standard. To avoid parsing issues, we recommend using the following date format: "Weekday, DD Mon YYYY HH:MM:SS Timezone". For example, "Fri, 4 Sep 1998 19:15:56 GMT".
- 
    While not required, consider also setting the
    max-agefield of theCache-Controlresponse header to help crawlers determine when to recrawl the specific URL. Set the value of themax-agefield to the expected number of seconds the content will be unchanged. For example,Cache-Control: max-age=94043.
  Learn more about the
  Last-Modified
  response header and its request header counterpart, If-Modified-Since.
Verifying Google's crawlers and fetchers
Google's crawlers identify themselves in three ways:
- 
    The HTTP user-agentrequest header.
- The source IP address of the request.
- The reverse DNS hostname of the source IP.
Learn how to use these details to verify Google's crawlers and fetchers.