vote up 3 vote down star
3

I am using Tomcat to compress my HTML content like this:

<Connector port="8080" maxHttpHeaderSize="8192"
maxProcessors="150" maxThreads="150" minSpareThreads="25"
maxSpareThreads="75" enableLookups="false" redirectPort="8443"
acceptCount="150" connectionTimeout="20000" disableUploadTimeout="true"
compression="on" compressionMinSize="128" noCompressionUserAgents="gozilla, traviata"
compressableMimeType="text/html"
URIEncoding="UTF-8" />

In the HTTP header (as observed via YSlow), however, I am not seeing

Content-Encoding: gzip

resulting in a poor YSlow score.

All I see is

HeadersPost
Response Headers
Server: Apache-Coyote/1.1
Content-Type:   text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Language:   en-US
Content-Length: 5251
Date:   Sat, 14 Feb 2009 23:33:51 GMT

I am running an apache mod_jk Tomcat configuration.

How do I compress HTML content with Tomcat, and also have it add "Content-Encoding: gzip" in the header?

flag

63% accept rate

4 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

Have a look at http://sourceforge.net/projects/pjl-comp-filter/.

Other custom solutions may have memory leaks.

link|flag
cherouvim: Thanks. I will take a look. – Julien Chastang Mar 4 at 18:53
vote up 0 vote down

Tomcat will be doing the compression. However because you are using mod_jk I guess you are getting you requests via Apache on port 80 rather than tomcat on port 8080. As an experiment try getting your page via port 8080 and then checking yslow you should see the correct headers.

I think what is happening is that apache is unzipping the content that it is getting from tomcat via mod_jk and then passing the deflated content on to the browser.

If you wish to use mod_jk then you will need to set up your compression on Apache rather than Tomcat.

Good luck

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Perhaps the compression Tomcat is referring to isn't gzip? It's a stab in the dark, but it might relate to white-space compression, or line trimming.

I would imagine Tomcat would be a bit more explicit in this regard (here's hoping).

We have the gzip filter mentioned by duffmo running in our application, the web.xml looks something like this:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<web-app version="2.4" xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/j2ee" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"  xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/j2ee web-app_2_4.xsd">

    <display-name>App-Web</display-name>

    <!-- FILTERS -->

    <!-- Gzip filter -->
    <filter>
        <filter-name>GZIPFilter</filter-name>
        <filter-class>weblogicx.servlet.gzip.filter.GZIPFilter</filter-class>
    </filter>

    [snip]    
</web-app>
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Try using a gzip compression filter:

http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2003/11/19/filters.html

Configure it in your web.xml and you should be all set.

link|flag
A variation on this filter is what I ended up doing. I often find Tomcat disappointing. – Julien Chastang Feb 17 at 21:48
This is old and only for educational purposes. After using it in production for 2 years I found out that it was leaking memory. – cherouvim Mar 4 at 17:17
Interesting. What would an industrial strength one look like? Did you ever profile it to pinpoint where the leak was coming from? – duffymo Mar 4 at 18:26
@duffymo: I know that my comment was without references and I'm afraid that I do not have any further input right now on where the problem was. The truth though is that PJL saved me. Too bad it seems to be a dead project as well. – cherouvim Mar 4 at 18:32
What's PJL? Never heard of it. – duffymo Mar 4 at 18:52
show 6 more comments

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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