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Anonymous, 2007-04-19 00:20
Use xargs -r option (a gnu extension) to not run the command if it's empty
{{{
#!rst
==================
Output Compression
==================
--------------------
Module: mod_compress
--------------------
.. meta::
:keywords: lighttpd, compress
.. contents:: Table of Contents
Description ===========
Output compression reduces the network load and can improve the overall
throughput of the webserver. All major http-clients support compression by
announcing it in the Accept-Encoding header. This is used to negotiate the
most suitable compression method. We support deflate, gzip and bzip2.
deflate (RFC1950, RFC1951) and gzip (RFC1952) depend on zlib while bzip2
depends on libbzip2. bzip2 is only supported by lynx and some other console
text-browsers.
We currently limit to compression support to static files.
Caching
-------
mod_compress can store compressed files on disk to optimize the compression
on a second request away. As soon as compress.cache-dir is set the files are
compressed.
(You will need to create the cache directory if it doesn't already exist. The web server will not do this for you. The directory will also need the proper ownership. For Debian/Ubuntu the user and group ids should both be www-data.)
The names of the cache files are made of the filename, the compression method
and the etag associated to the file.
Cleaning the cache is left to the user. A cron job deleting files older than
10 days could do it: ::
find /var/www/cache -type f -mtime +10 | xargs -r rm
Limitations
-----------
The module limits the compression of files to files smaller than 128 MByte and
larger than 128 Byte.
The lower limit is set as small files tend to become larger by compressing due
to the compression headers, the upper limit is set to work sensibly with
memory and cpu-time.
Options =======
compress.cache-dir
name of the directory where compressed content will be cached
e.g.: ::
compress.cache-dir = "/var/www/cache/"
- even better with virt-hosting
$HTTP["host"] == "docs.example.org" {
compress.cache-dir = "/var/www/cache/docs.example.org/"
}
Default: not set, compress the file for every request
compress.filetype
mimetypes which might get compressed
e.g.: ::
compress.filetype = ("text/plain", "text/html")
Keep in mind that compressed JavaScript and CSS files are broken in some
browsers. Not setting any filetypes will result in no files being compressed.
Default: not set
compress.max-filesize
maximum size of the original file to be compressed kBytes.
This is meant to protect the server against DoSing as compressing large
(let's say 1Gbyte) takes a lot of time and would delay the whole operation
of the server.
There is a hard upper limit of 128Mbyte.
Default: unlimited (== hard-limit of 128MByte)
Compressing Dynamic Content ===========================
PHP
---
To compress dynamic content with PHP please enable ::
zlib.output_compression = 1
zlib.output_handler = On
in the php.ini as PHP provides compression support by itself.
TurboGears
----------
To compress dynamic content with TurboGears please enable ::
[/]
gzip_filter.on = True
gzip_filter.mime_types = ["application/x-javascript", "text/javascript", "text/html", "text/css", "text/plain"]
in the config/app.cfg file in your TurboGears application. The above lines should already be in the file. You just need to remove the comment symbol in front of the lines to make them active.
}}}
Updated by Anonymous over 17 years ago · 10 revisions