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Dear folks,

I enabled gzip compression on my website, and tested with the following tools:

Though, Firefox and all its extensions (Firebug, Yslow and Google Page Speed) say they receive noncompressed content.

text/html is compressed by php's ob_gzhandler, which cares about headers as well.

I don't use proxy.

What am I doing wrong?

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4 Answers

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That's not really the answer you might expect, but did you try not compressing out data with PHP, but with Apache ?

This can be done use mod_deflate.

Couple of things :

  • it would mean less calculations for PHP
  • it would also mean (and that's the nicest part ;-) ) that your CSS/JS files could be compresses to ; considering the size of those, nowadays, it might not be a bad thing to compress them...


As a sidenote : to help us figure out what's going wrong with the compression by PHP, could you give more informations ? Like the URL of your site (if it's public), and some code ?


EDIT now that we have the URL : http://ego.pestaa.hu/

When I go to that page, the response's headers are as follow :

HTTP/1.x 200 OK
Date: Sat, 01 Aug 2009 21:53:37 GMT
Server: Apache
X-Powered-By: PHP/5.2.6
**Content-Encoding: gzip**
Vary: Accept-Encoding
Keep-Alive: timeout=2, max=100
Connection: Keep-Alive
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Content-Type: text/html

(using firefox 3.5 with LiveHTTPHeaders extension)

The three testing sites you indicated also say that your page is gzipped.
Did you find what the problem was ?

Are you sure this is not something coming from your browser, that would not send the following header in the request :

Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate


EDIT after other answer

Quote from the comments :

the source of problem probably isn't my website but my isp/browser/router. One of them may decompress every component before it reaches internal processes.

Oh, if the problem is not your website, I think I totally mis-understood the question -- sorry about that :-( I thought you didn't know how to server gzipped content from your website.
And I think I'm not the only one, btw

If the problem has nothing to do with your website's configuration, then, two possibilities :

  • maybe a mis-configuration of firefox ? If you go to about:config, what does the network.http.accept-encoding say ? For me, it's gzip,deflate
  • if the problem is coming from your ISP or something like that, there's nothing anyone can do...
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My hosting does not provide mod_deflate, I tried. I use minify to compress css/js. The website in question is ego.pestaa.hu – pestaa Aug 1 at 21:45
oh, ok :-( too bad you don't have mod_deflate :-( ; btw, I just tested the URL you gave with FF 3.5, and the page seems to be compressed just fine : using LiveHTTPHeaders, I have a "Content-Encoding: gzip " in the response's headers – Pascal MARTIN Aug 1 at 21:54
Well, all three sites you indicated in the OP show your content is gzipped ; so, I guess you found how to solve your problem :-) – Pascal MARTIN Aug 1 at 21:56
No, the source of problem probably isn't my website but my isp/browser/router. One of them may decompress every component before it reaches internal processes. – pestaa Aug 1 at 21:59
It's good to see you have the content properly compressed. Still, in my network something is missing. – pestaa Aug 1 at 22:04
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Try the Live Http Headers firefox plugin in addition to the others. It opens a window showing the exact request/response headers as they go back and forward, so you know without doubt what the accept-encoding and response-encoding is.

link|flag
Thanks for the suggestion. This extension also shows that nothing is gzipped. I wonder what could cause this. – pestaa Aug 1 at 21:56
No idea, but now you know the problem's server-side. The request includes the gzip accept header, yes? – skaffman Aug 1 at 22:11
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  • Are you sure you're testing the same URLs with the Firefox extensions?
    • Using the ob_gzhandler in PHP will compress the output of your php pages, but YSlow and others warn you also about uncompressed css/javascript files.
  • Check that the browser is sending the correct headers. A browser usually sends the "Accept-encoding: gzip" header to tell the script/webserver it accepts compressed content. The testing scripts will surely send that but your browser might not.
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Have you tried just enabling gzip in Apache/your web server instead/as well?

link|flag
In my country there are no great hosting services, and even shared hosts with mod_deflate enabled are quite expensive. I tried to enable but with no success. – pestaa Aug 1 at 21:43

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