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I serve pre-compressed CSS and JS files on my site, and IE6-8 and FF is working perfectly with my .htaccess file.

# Compressed files
RewriteCond %{HTTP:Accept-Encoding} .*gzip.*
AddEncoding x-gzip .gz
AddType application/x-javascript .gz
AddType text/css .gz

I call the files with the .gz extension already [example]:

<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all" href="css/layout.css.gz" />

So why is this breaks in google Chrome?

Thanks.

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6 Answers

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Download Fiddler and look at the raw response headers to see what the server is sending back for that particular request.

FYI, Fiddler is a client side proxy that filters your browser requests through. Super informative when dealing with these kind of issues.

-- Update

Upon further investigation, it doesn't appear that your RewriteCond is actually doing what you think it is doing. According to the Documentation, the RewriteCond directive is only used in conjunction with a RewriteRule.

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vote up 1 vote down

Our .htaccess file (we have .jsz files with compressed javascript, and Chrome handles them fine):

AddEncoding gzip .jsz
AddType text/javascript .jsz
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vote up 0 vote down

Google Chrome (and Apple Safari) do not support gzip compressed CSS and JavaScript. Certain IE6 versions also have problems. They do support gzip compressed HTML documents, but not CSS and JavaScript.

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how can I filter those who not support in my htaccess file ? – vsync Jun 8 at 8:51
You shouldn't link to the .gz files directly from your HTML. You could use mod_rewrite or (even better) mod_negotiation so send the gzip compressed file instead. – elmuerte Jun 9 at 8:24
or just yui compress them, which will give you valid JS and comparable compression savings – annakata Jun 16 at 8:15
YUI compression is no where close to gzip compression. Usually you would also gzip the result of YUI. See: julienlecomte.net/blog/2007/08/13 – elmuerte Jun 17 at 8:18
yes, they are already compressed with Dean's PACKER, but GZIP is by far the best solution. my server doesn't support GZIP on the fly..so I must pre-compressed them. mod_rewrite doesn't work. even if it did, would it help in Chrome case? – vsync Jun 17 at 18:55
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You would just need to set the Content-Encoding header field to tell the client, that the response data is encoded with gzip:

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

But unfortunatly Apache doesn’t allow to set that header field. Instead Content-Encoding will become X-Content-Encoding.

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so what does that mean if it will become with X prefix? – vsync Jun 17 at 18:58
It means that it will not be recognized. – Gumbo Jun 18 at 8:02
vote up 0 vote down

1> You must use the "Content-Encoding: gzip" response header. 2> You must only return GZIP compressed content when the client's "Accept-Encoding" header allows GZIP.

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vote up 0 vote down

Hi vsync,

I answered a similar question with a much more conservative matching rule for when to Gzip:

Safari, Chrome, and IE6 all have problems with Gzipped downloads. Also, Apache will do the gzip compression for you, there is no need to manually gzip files. Try this snippet:

# This uses mod_deflate, which is pretty standard on Apache 2.  Loading
# mod_deflate looks like this:
#
#   LoadModule deflate_module modules/mod_deflate.so
#
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/html text/plain text/xml application/xml application/xhtml+xml text/javascript text/css application/x-javascript
BrowserMatch ^Mozilla/4 gzip-only-text/html
BrowserMatch ^Mozilla/4\.0[678] no-gzip
BrowserMatch \\bMSIE !no-gzip !gzip-only-text/html

See the original post: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1245889/htaccss-file-to-allow-safari-other-browsers-to-open-gzip/1245948#1245948

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