vote up 0 vote down star

I'm developing a asp.net site (running .net 3.5 SP 1) and using UrlRewriter.Net (http://urlrewriter.net/) for urlrewriting.

The site is hostet on a Windows 2003 server with all servicepacks and so forth.

It runs IIS 6.

In order to enable url rewriting I've setup a wildcard handler for *, which means all requests are sent through the asp.net engine.

I've also enabled IIS compression feature - this works fine when I use the non-rewritten urls. However it doesn't compress the rewritten pages.

I've added aspx, ashx and asmx as extensions to the metabase.xml, and set the proper compression level (9), etc.

The rewritten pages have .htm extension, so it shouldn't be because the extension is wrong.

Any ideas why this doesn't work ?

flag

2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

Probably because of the wildcard, IIS sends the request to ASP.NET, which further handles page generation etc. The compression happens to late in the pipeline, so it gets bypassed...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Unfortunately I haven't enough rep to leave comments.

If the issue is that compressions happens at the wrong time in the pipeline, I'd expect it didn't work for .aspx either (since everything is sent through the asp.net handler)

That being said, I guess it could handle .aspx earlier in the pipeline, as I believe the wildcard handler functions as a "last resort". Unfortunately on IIS 6 there is no changing the priority of handlers :-(

I guess I'll have to ask our administrator for a Windows 2008 server with IIS 7.

link|flag
I tried fooling around with the metabase settings to no avail. So it's up to my system administrator now. I believe you're right about what happens Colin. – Steffen Jun 19 at 7:24
Cool, let me know if it works out! – Colin Jun 19 at 7:35
It likely takes some time before I get my hands on a win 2008 server, so I guess this question is long time gone by then :-/ He says we're waiting for 2008 R2 to be released, which is scheduled for october. – Steffen Jun 19 at 8:36

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.