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@hint/hint-http-compression

hint for HTTP compression related best practices

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Optimal compression (http-compression)

http-compression warns against serving resources uncompressed or using an inappropriate encoding.

Why is this important?

One of the fastest and easiest ways one can improve web site/app performance is to reduce the amount of data sent to the client by using HTTP compression. This not only reduces the data used by the user, but can also significantly cut down on the server costs.

Here are a few rules to follow to get the most out of compressing resources:

  • Only compress resources for which the result of the compression will be smaller than original size.

    In general text-based resources (HTML, CSS, JavaScript, SVGs, etc.) compress very well especially if the file is not very small. The same goes for some other file formats (e.g.: ICO files, web fonts such as EOT, OTF, and TTF, etc.)

    However, compressing resources that are already compressed (e.g.: images, audio files, PDFs, etc.) not only wastes CPU resources, but usually results in little to no reduction, or in some cases, results in an increase in file size.

    The same applies to resources that are very small because of the overhead of compression file formats.

  • Use the most efficient compression method.

    gzip is the most used encoding method currently as it strikes a good balance between compression ratio (as high as 70% especially for larger files) and encoding time and is supported pretty much everywhere.

    Better savings can be achieved using Zopfli which can reduce the size on average 3–8% more than gzip. Since Zopfli output (for the gzip option) is valid gzip content, Zopfli works everywhere gzip works. The only down side is that encoding takes more time than gzip, making Zopfli more suitable for static content (i.e. encoding resources as part of a build script, not on the fly).

    Things can be improved even further using Brotli. This encoding can achieve 20–26% higher compression ratios over Zopfli. However, this encoding is not compatible with gzip, limiting the support to modern browsers and its usage to only over HTTPS (as proxies misinterpret unknown encodings).

    As a rule, for best performance and compatibility, resources should be served compressed with Zopfli over insecure HTTP, and Brotli when sending over HTTPS with a fallback to Zopfli if HTTPS is not supported.

  • Avoid using deprecated or not widely supported compression formats, and Content-Type values.

    Avoid using deprecated Content-Type values such as x-gzip. Some user agents may alias them to the correct, current equivalent value (e.g.: alias x-gzip to gzip), but that is not always true.

    Also avoid using encodings that are not widely supported (e.g.: compress, bzip2, sdch, etc.), and/or may not be as efficient, or can create problems (e.g.: deflate).

  • Avoid potential caching related issues.

    When resources are served compressed, they should be served with the Vary header containing the Accept-Encoding value (or with something such as Cache-Control: private that prevents caching in proxy caches and such altogether).

    This needs to be done to avoid problems such as an intermediate proxy caching the compressed version of the resource and then sending it to all user agents, whether they support that encoding or even requested the compressed version.

  • Resources should be served compressed only when requested as such, appropriately encoded, and without relying on user agent sniffing.

    The Accept-Encoding request header specified should be respected. Sending a resource encoded with a different encoding than one of the ones accepted can lead to problems.

    Here are some examples:

    • If the user agent makes a request containing the Accept-Encoding: identity header, that means it wants the response to not be transformed in any way, so the server should send the data uncompress.

    • If the user agent makes a request containing the Accept-Encoding: gzip, br header, that means it wants the response to either be uncompress or compress with one of the specified encodings, namely: gzip (or the gzip compatible Zopfli) or Brotli. In the optimal case, the server sends the data compress with Zopfli over HTTP, and Brotli over HTTPS.

  • Dealing with special cases.

    One such special case is SVGZ files that are SVG files compressed with gzip. Since they are already compressed, they shouldn't be compressed again. However, sending them without the Content-Encoding: gzip header will create problems as user agents will not know they need to decompress before trying to display them.

What does the hint check?

The hint checks for the use cases previously specified. Namely, it checks that:

  • Only resources for which the result of the compression is smaller than original size are served compressed.

  • The most efficient encodings are used (by default the hint check if Zopfli is used over HTTP and Brotli over HTTPS, however that can be changed, see: Can the hint be configured? section).

  • Deprecated or not widely supported encodings, and Content-Type values are not used.

  • Potential caching related issues are avoided.

  • Resources are served compressed only when requested as such, are appropriately encoded, and no user-agent detection is done.

  • Special cases (such as SVGZ) are handled correctly.

Examples that trigger the hint

Resource that should be compressed is not served compressed.

e.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Type: text/javascript

<file content>

Resource that should not be compressed is served compressed.

e.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.png contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: br
Content-Type: image/png
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<file content compressed with Brotli>

Resource that compressed results in a bigger or equal size to the uncompressed size is still served compressed.

e.g.: For http://example.com/example.js containing only const x = 5;, using the defaults, the sizes may be as follows.

original size: 13 bytes

gzip size:    38 bytes
zopfli size:  33 bytes
brotli size:  17 bytes

When the request for http://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<file content compressed with gzip>

Resource that should be compressed is served compressed with deprecated or disallowed compression method or Content-Encoding value.

e.g.: When the request for http://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate

response contains deprecated x-gzip value for Content-Encoding

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: x-gzip
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<file content compressed with gzip>

response is compressed with disallowed compress compression method

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: compress
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<file content compressed with compress>

or response tries to use deprecated SDCH

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: gzip,
Content-Type: text/javascript
Get-Dictionary: /dictionaries/search_dict, /dictionaries/help_dict
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<file content compressed with gzip>

Resource that should be compressed is not served compressed using Zopfli over HTTP.

e.g.: When the request for http://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<content compressed with gzip>

Resource that should be compressed is served compressed using Brotli over HTTP.

e.g.: When the request for http://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: br
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<content compressed with Brotli>

Resource that should be compressed is not served compressed using Brotli over HTTPS.

e.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<content compressed with Zopfli>

Resource that is served compressed doesn't account for caching (e.g.: is not served with the Vary header with the Accept-Encoding value included, or something such as Cache-Control: private).

e.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: br
Content-Type: text/javascript

<content compressed with Brotli>

Resource is blindly served compressed using gzip no matter what the user agent advertises as supporting.

E.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<content compressed with gzip>

Resource is served compressed only for certain user agents.

E.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 Gecko

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Type: text/javascript

<file content>

however, when requested with

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.13; rv:57.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/57.0

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: br
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<content compressed with Brotli>

SVGZ resource is not served with Content-Encoding: gzip header:

E.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.svgz contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Type: image/svg+xml

<file content>

Examples that pass the hint

Resource that should be compressed is served compressed using Zopfli over HTTP and with the Vary: Accept-Encoding header.

e.g.: When the request for http://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<content compressed with Zopfli>

Resource that should be compressed is served compressed using Brotli over HTTPS and with the Vary: Accept-Encoding header.

e.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.js contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: br
Content-Type: text/javascript
Vary: Accept-Encoding

<content compressed with Brotli>

Resource that should not be compressed is not served compressed.

e.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.png contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Type: image/png

<image content>

SVGZ resource is served with Content-Encoding: gzip header:

e.g.: When the request for https://example.com/example.svgz contains

...
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br

response is

HTTP/... 200 OK

...
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Type: image/svg+xml

<SVGZ content>

How to configure the server to pass this hint

How to configure Apache

Apache can be configured to conditionally (based on media type) compress resources using gzip as well as send the appropriate Content-Encoding and Vary headers using mod_deflate and the AddOutputFilterByType directive.

For Zopfli, there isn't a core Apache module or directive to do it, However, since compressing things using Zopfli takes more time, it's usually indicated to do it as part of your build step. Once that is done, Apache needs to be configure to server those pre-compressed files when gzip compression is requested by the user agent.

Starting with Apache v2.4.26, mod_brotli and the AddOutputFilterByType directive can be used to conditionally compress with Brotli as well as add the Content-Encoding and Vary headers. However, like Zopfli, Brotli can take more time. So, when provided, mod_brotli may be used to compress dynamic resources (especially if set to use lower compression quality levels), but for static resources it's indicated to compress them as part of the build process and configure Apache to serve those pre-compressed resources whenever Brotli compression is requested over HTTPS.

If you don't want to start from scratch, below is a generic starter snippet that contains the necessary configurations to ensure that commonly used file types are served compressed and with the appropriate headers, and thus, make your web site/app pass this hint.

Important notes:

  • The following relies on Apache being configure to have the correct filename extensions to media types mappings (see Apache section from content-type hint).

  • For Zopfli and Brotli this snippet assumes that running the build step will result in 3 version for every resource:

    • the original (e.g.: script.js) - you should also have this file in case the user agent doesn't requests things compressed
    • the file compressed with Zopfli (e.g.: script.js.gz)
    • the file compressed with Brotli (e.g.: script.js.br)
<IfModule mod_headers.c>
    <IfModule mod_rewrite.c>

        # Turn on the rewrite engine (this is necessary in order for
        # the `RewriteRule` directives to work).
        #
        # https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/core.html#options

        RewriteEngine On

        # Enable the `FollowSymLinks` option if it isn't already.
        #
        # https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/core.html#options

        Options +FollowSymlinks

        # If the web host doesn't allow the `FollowSymlinks` option,
        # it needs to be comment out or removed, and then the following
        # uncomment, but be aware of the performance impact.
        #
        # https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/misc/perf-tuning.html#symlinks

        # Options +SymLinksIfOwnerMatch

        # Depending on how the server is set up, you may also need to
        # use the `RewriteOptions` directive to enable some options for
        # the rewrite engine.
        #
        # https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_rewrite.html#rewriteoptions

        # RewriteBase /

        # - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

        # 1) Brotli

            # If `Accept-Encoding` header contains `br`

            RewriteCond "%{HTTP:Accept-encoding}" "br"

            # and the request is made over HTTPS.

            RewriteCond "%{HTTPS}" "on"

            # The Brotli pre-compressed version of the file exists
            # (e.g.: `script.js` is requested and `script.js.gz` exists).

            RewriteCond "%{REQUEST_FILENAME}\.br" "-s"

            # Then, serve the Brotli pre-compressed version of the file.

            RewriteRule "^(.*)" "$1\.br" [QSA]

            # Set the correct media type of the requested file. Otherwise,
            # it will be served with the br media type since the file has
            # the `.br` extension.
            #
            # Also, set the special purpose environment variables so
            # that Apache doesn't recompress these files.

            RewriteRule "\.(ico|cur)\.br$"      "-" [T=image/x-icon,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.(md|markdown)\.br$"  "-" [T=text/markdown,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.appcache\.br$"       "-" [T=text/cache-manifest,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.atom\.br$"           "-" [T=application/atom+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.bmp\.br$"            "-" [T=image/bmp,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.css\.br$"            "-" [T=text/css,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.eot.\.br$"           "-" [T=application/vnd.ms-fontobject,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.geojson\.br$"        "-" [T=application/vnd.geo+json,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.html?\.br$"          "-" [T=text/html,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.ics\.br$"            "-" [T=text/calendar,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.json\.br$"           "-" [T=application/json,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.jsonld\.br$"         "-" [T=application/ld+json,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.m?js\.br$"           "-" [T=text/javascript,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.otf\.br$"            "-" [T=font/otf,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.rdf\.br$"            "-" [T=application/rdf+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.rss\.br$"            "-" [T=application/rss+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.svg\.br$"            "-" [T=image/svg+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.ttc\.br$"            "-" [T=font/collection,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.ttf\.br$"            "-" [T=font/ttf,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.txt\.br$"            "-" [T=text/plain,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.vc(f|ard)\.br$"      "-" [T=text/vcard,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.vtt\.br$"            "-" [T=text/vtt,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.webmanifest\.br$"    "-" [T=application/manifest+json,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.xhtml\.br$"          "-" [T=application/xhtml+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.xml\.br$"            "-" [T=text/xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]

            # Set the `Content-Encoding` header.

            <FilesMatch "\.br$">
                Header append Content-Encoding br
            </FilesMatch>

        # - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

        # 2) Zopfli

            # If `Accept-Encoding` header contains `gzip` and the
            # request is made over HTTP.

            RewriteCond "%{HTTP:Accept-encoding}" "gzip"

            # The Zopfli pre-compressed version of the file exists
            # (e.g.: `script.js` is requested and `script.js.gz` exists).

            RewriteCond "%{REQUEST_FILENAME}\.gz" "-s"

            # Then serve the Zopfli pre-compressed version of the file.

            RewriteRule "^(.*)" "$1\.gz" [QSA]

            # Set the media types of the file, as otherwise, because
            # the file has the `.gz` extension, it wil be served with
            # the gzip media type.
            #
            # Also, set the special purpose environment variables so
            # that Apache doesn't recompress these files.

            RewriteRule "\.(ico|cur)\.gz$"      "-" [T=image/x-icon,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.(md|markdown)\.gz$"  "-" [T=text/markdown,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.appcache\.gz$"       "-" [T=text/cache-manifest,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.atom\.gz$"           "-" [T=application/atom+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.bmp\.gz$"            "-" [T=image/bmp,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.css\.gz$"            "-" [T=text/css,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.eot.\.gz$"           "-" [T=application/vnd.ms-fontobject,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.geojson\.gz$"        "-" [T=application/vnd.geo+json,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.html?\.gz$"          "-" [T=text/html,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.ics\.gz$"            "-" [T=text/calendar,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.json\.gz$"           "-" [T=application/json,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.jsonld\.gz$"         "-" [T=application/ld+json,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.m?js\.gz$"           "-" [T=text/javascript,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.otf\.gz$"            "-" [T=font/otf,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.rdf\.gz$"            "-" [T=application/rdf+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.rss\.gz$"            "-" [T=application/rss+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.svg\.gz$"            "-" [T=image/svg+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.ttc\.gz$"            "-" [T=font/collection,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.ttf\.gz$"            "-" [T=font/ttf,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.txt\.gz$"            "-" [T=text/plain,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.vc(f|ard)\.gz$"      "-" [T=text/vcard,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.vtt\.gz$"            "-" [T=text/vtt,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.webmanifest\.gz$"    "-" [T=application/manifest+json,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.xhtml\.gz$"          "-" [T=application/xhtml+xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]
            RewriteRule "\.xml\.gz$"            "-" [T=text/xml,E=no-brotli:1,E=no-gzip:1]

            # Set the `Content-Encoding` header.

            <FilesMatch "\.gz$">
                Header append Content-Encoding gzip
            </FilesMatch>

        # - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

        # Set the `Vary` header.

        <FilesMatch "\.(br|gz)$">
            Header append Vary Accept-Encoding
        </FilesMatch>

    </IfModule>
</IfModule>

<IfModule mod_deflate.c>

    # 3) gzip
    #
    # [!] For Apache versions below version 2.3.7 you don't need to
    # enable `mod_filter` and can remove the `<IfModule mod_filter.c>`
    # and `</IfModule>` lines as `AddOutputFilterByType` is still in
    # the core directives.
    #
    # https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_filter.html#addoutputfilterbytype

    <IfModule mod_filter.c>
        AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE "application/atom+xml" \
                                      "application/json" \
                                      "application/manifest+json" \
                                      "application/rdf+xml" \
                                      "application/rss+xml" \
                                      "application/schema+json" \
                                      "application/vnd.ms-fontobject" \
                                      "application/xhtml+xml" \
                                      "font/collection" \
                                      "font/opentype" \
                                      "font/otf" \
                                      "font/ttf" \
                                      "image/bmp" \
                                      "image/svg+xml" \
                                      "image/x-icon" \
                                      "text/cache-manifest" \
                                      "text/css" \
                                      "text/html" \
                                      "text/javascript" \
                                      "text/plain" \
                                      "text/vtt" \
                                      "text/xml"
    </IfModule>

    # - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

    # Special case: SVGZ
    #
    # If these files type would be served without the
    # `Content-Enable: gzip` response header, user agents would
    # not know that they first need to uncompress the response,
    # and thus, wouldn't be able to understand the content.

    <IfModule mod_mime.c>
        AddEncoding gzip              svgz
    </IfModule>

</IfModule>

Also note that:

For the complete set of configurations, not just for this rule, see the Apache server configuration related documentation.

How to configure IIS

IIS 7+ can be configured to compress responses (static or dynamic) via the <urlCompression> element.

For Zopfli, there isn't a core IIS module to do it. However, since compressing things using Zopfli takes more time, it's usually indicated to do it as part of your build step. Once that is done, IIS needs to be configured to server those pre-compressed files when gzip compression is requested by the user agent.

Brotli, like Zopfli, takes more time. It's indicated to compress resources at build time, and configure IIS to serve those pre-compressed resources whenever Brotli compression is requested over HTTPS by the user agent.

If you don't want to start from scratch, below is a generic starter snippet that contains the necessary configurations to ensure that commonly used file types are served compressed and with the appropriate headers, and thus, make your web site/app pass this hint.

Important notes:

  • The following relies on IIS being configured to have the correct filename extensions to media types mappings (see IIS section from content-type rule).

  • For Zopfli and Brotli this snippet assumes that running the build step will result in 3 version for every resource:

    • the original (e.g.: script.js) - you should also have this file in case the user agent doesn't requests things compressed
    • the file compressed with Zopfli (e.g.: script.js.gz)
    • the file compressed with Brotli (e.g.: script.js.br)
<configuration>
    <system.webServer>
        <staticContent>
            <!-- IIS doesn't know about Brotli. If mimeMap is not added
                 br files will not be served -->
            <mimeMap fileExtension=".br" mimeType="application/brotli" />
        <staticContent>

        <rewrite>
            <rewriteMaps>
                <!-- List of all the file types and the right `content-type` values
                     when compressed. They will be restored in an outboud rule. -->
                <rewriteMap name="CompressedExtensions" defaultValue="">
                    <!-- zopfli mapping -->
                    <add key="appcache.gz" value="text/cache-manifest; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="bmp.gz" value="image/bmp" />
                    <add key="css.gz" value="text/css; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="cur.gz" value="image/x-icon" />
                    <add key="eot.gz" value="application/vnd.ms-fontobject" />
                    <add key="html.gz" value="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="ico.gz" value="image/x-icon" />
                    <add key="js.gz" value="text/javascript; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="json.gz" value="application/json; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="map.gz" value="application/json; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="mjs.gz" value="text/javascript; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="otf.gz" value="font/otf" />
                    <add key="rss.gz" value="application/rss+xml; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="svg.gz" value="image/svg+xml; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="ttf.gz" value="font/ttf; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="txt.gz" value="text/plain; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="vtt.gz" value="text/vtt; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="webmanifest.gz" value="application/manifest+json; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="xml.gz" value="text/xml; charset=utf-8" />
                    <!-- brotli mapping -->
                    <add key="appcache.br" value="text/cache-manifest; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="bmp.br" value="image/bmp" />
                    <add key="css.br" value="text/css; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="cur.br" value="image/x-icon" />
                    <add key="eot.br" value="application/vnd.ms-fontobject" />
                    <add key="html.br" value="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="ico.br" value="image/x-icon" />
                    <add key="js.br" value="text/javascript; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="json.br" value="application/json; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="map.br" value="application/json; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="mjs.br" value="text/javascript; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="otf.br" value="font/otf" />
                    <add key="rss.br" value="application/rss+xml; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="svg.br" value="image/svg+xml; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="ttf.br" value="font/ttf; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="txt.br" value="text/plain; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="vtt.br" value="text/vtt; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="webmanifest.br" value="application/manifest+json; charset=utf-8" />
                    <add key="xml.br" value="text/xml; charset=utf-8" />
                </rewriteMap>
            </rewriteMaps>
            <outboundRules>
                <!-- Restore the mime type for compressed assets. See below for more explanation. -->
                <rule name="RestoreMime" enabled="true">
                    <match serverVariable="RESPONSE_Content_Type" pattern=".*" />
                    <conditions>
                        <add input="{HTTP_URL}" pattern="\.((?:appcache|bmp|css|cur|eot|html|ico|js|json|map|mjs|otf|rss|svg|ttf|txt|vtt|webmanifest|xml)\.(gz|br))" />
                        <add input="{CompressedExtensions:{C:1}}" pattern="(.+)" />
                    </conditions>
                    <action type="Rewrite" value="{C:3}" />
                </rule>
                <!-- add vary header -->
                <rule name="AddVaryAcceptEncoding" preCondition="PreCompressedFile" enabled="true">
                    <match serverVariable="RESPONSE_Vary" pattern=".*" />
                    <action type="Rewrite" value="Accept-Encoding" />
                </rule>
                <!-- indicate response is encoded with brotli -->
                <rule name="AddEncodingBrotli" preCondition="PreCompressedBrotli" enabled="true" stopProcessing="true">
                    <match serverVariable="RESPONSE_Content_Encoding" pattern=".*" />
                    <action type="Rewrite" value="br" />
                </rule>
                <!-- indicate response is encoded with gzip -->
                <rule name="AddEncodingZopfli" preCondition="PreCompressedZopfli" enabled="true" stopProcessing="true">
                    <match serverVariable="RESPONSE_Content_Encoding" pattern=".*" />
                    <action type="Rewrite" value="gzip" />
                </rule>

                <preConditions>
                    <preCondition name="PreCompressedFile">
                        <add input="{HTTP_URL}" pattern="\.((?:appcache|bmp|css|cur|eot|html|ico|js|json|map|mjs|otf|rss|svg|ttf|txt|vtt|webmanifest|xml)\.(gz|br))" />
                    </preCondition>
                    <preCondition name="PreCompressedZopfli">
                        <add input="{HTTP_URL}" pattern="\.((?:appcache|bmp|css|cur|eot|html|ico|js|json|map|mjs|otf|rss|svg|ttf|txt|vtt|webmanifest|xml)\.gz)" />
                    </preCondition>
                    <preCondition name="PreCompressedBrotli">
                        <add input="{HTTP_URL}" pattern="\.((?:appcache|bmp|css|cur|eot|html|ico|js|json|map|mjs|otf|rss|svg|ttf|txt|vtt|webmanifest|xml)\.br)" />
                    </preCondition>
                </preConditions>
            </outboundRules>
            <rules>
                <!--
                    Compression rules. This works in combination with the `outbound rules` bellow. Basically what happens is:

                    1. We check if the user agent supprots compression via the `Accept-Encoding` header.
                    2. We prioritize `brotli` of `gzip`, and append the right extension (`.gz` or `.br`) and prepend `dist`.
                       `dist` is where all the pulic assets live. This is transparent to the user.
                       We assume all assets with those extensions have a `.gz` and `.br` version because of the build system we
                       have.
                       IIS then serves the asset applying the outbound rules.
                    3. If the final part of the file (`.ext.gz` or `.ext.br`) matches one of the `CompressedExtensions` `rewriteMap`, we
                       rewrite the `content-type` header
                    4. Based on the extension (`.gz` or `.br`), we rewrite the `content-encoding` header
                -->
                <rule name="ServerPreCompressedBrotli" stopProcessing="true">
                    <match url="^(.*/)?(.*?)\.(appcache|bmp|css|cur|eot|html|ico|js|json|map|mjs|otf|rss|svg|ttf|txt|vtt|webmanifest|xml)([?#].*)?$" ignoreCase="true"/>
                    <conditions>
                        <add input="{HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING}" pattern="br"/>
                    </conditions>
                    <action type="Rewrite" url="dist{REQUEST_URI}.br"/>
                </rule>
                <rule name="ServerPreCompressedZopfli" stopProcessing="true">
                    <match url="^(.*/)?(.*?)\.(appcache|bmp|css|cur|eot|html|ico|js|json|map|mjs|otf|rss|svg|ttf|txt|vtt|webmanifest|xml)([?#].*)?$" ignoreCase="true"/>
                    <conditions>
                        <add input="{HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING}" pattern="gzip"/>
                    </conditions>
                    <action type="Rewrite" url="dist{REQUEST_URI}.gz"/>
                </rule>
                <!-- Fallback in case the user agent doesn't support compression -->
                <rule name="static">
                    <match url="(?!scanner|search).*$" ignoreCase="true"/>
                    <action type="Rewrite" url="dist{REQUEST_URI}"/>
                </rule>
            </rules>
        </rewrite>
    </system.webServer>
</configuration>

Note that:

  • The above snippet works with IIS 7+.
  • You should use the above snippet in the web.config of your application.

For the complete set of configurations, not just for this rule, see the IIS server configuration related documentation.

If you prefer to let IIS compress your assets using Brotli, you can use the IIS compression scheme providers. However, make sure to read how to enable multiple compression schemes and the priority limitations in some versions.

Can the hint be configured?

You can override the defaults by specifying what type of compression you don't want the hint to check for. This can be done for the html (main page) and/or the resources the hint determines should be served compressed, using the following format:

In the .hintrc file:

{
    "connector": {...},
    "formatters": [...],
    "hints": {
        "http-compression": [ "warning", {
            "resource": {
                "<compression_type>": <true|false>,
                "threshold": <number>
                ...
            },
            "html": {
                "<compression_type>": <true|false>,
                "threshold": <number>
                ...
            }
        },
        ...
    },
    ...
}

Where <compression_method> can be one of: brotli, gzip, or zopfli. And threshold is the maximum size (in bytes) to set the severity of a report to hint. E.g. If you want the hint to check if only the page resources are served compressed using Brotli, and not the page itself, you can use the following configuration in the .hintrc:

{
    "connector": {...},
    "formatters": [...],
    "hints": {
        "http-compression": [ "warning", {
            "html": {
                "brotli": false,
                "threshold": 1024
            }
        }],
        ...
    },
    ...
}

Note: You can also use the ignoredUrls property from the .hintrc file to exclude domains you don’t control (e.g.: CDNs) from these checks.

How to use this hint?

This package is installed automatically by webhint:

npm install hint --save-dev

To use it, activate it via the .hintrc configuration file:

{
    "connector": {...},
    "formatters": [...],
    "hints": {
        "http-compression": "error",
        ...
    },
    "parsers": [...],
    ...
}

Note: The recommended way of running webhint is as a devDependency of your project.

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Package last updated on 04 Feb 2021

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