210

I have a webapp on a NGinx server. I set gzip on in the conf file and now I'm trying to see if it works. YSlow says it's not, but 5 out of 6 websites that do the test say it is. How can I get a definite answer on this and why is there a difference in the results?

8 Answers 8

289

It looks like one possible answer is, unsurprisingly, curl:

$ curl http://example.com/ --silent --write-out "%{size_download}\n" --output /dev/null
31032
$ curl http://example.com/ --silent -H "Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate" --write-out "%{size_download}\n" --output /dev/null
2553

In the second case the client tells the server that it supports content encoding and you can see that the response was indeed shorter, compressed.

3
  • 5
    This is true, but gzip can be configured to compress certain file types, and exclude others. So be sure that the files you curl using this test are of the type that will be compressed. Oct 24, 2013 at 15:26
  • 10
    I would suggest using -L flag for curl too to follow all redirects, e.g. from non-www to www. otherwise result of size_download may be wrong
    – vladkras
    Nov 21, 2016 at 10:12
  • 1
    If I could impress one thing on my younger devs, its the importance of having a solid unix foundation. +1 for CURL. Its confusing at first, a life saver when you know it.
    – Akron
    Apr 12, 2019 at 17:43
162

Update

Chrome changed the way it reports (see original answer if interested). You can tell using Developer Tools (F12). Go to the Network tab, select the file you want to examine and then look at the Headers tab on the right. If you are gzipped, then you will see that in the Content-Encoding.

In this example, slider.jpg is indeed being gzipped.

enter image description here

Compare that to this very page that you are on and look at a png file, you will see no such designation.

enter image description here

Just to be clear, it isn't because one is a jpg and one is a png. It is because one is gzipped and the other one isn't.


Previous Answer

In Chrome, if you pull up the Developer Tools and go to the Network tab, then it will show the following if there is no compression:

enter image description here

And the following if there IS compression:

enter image description here

In other words, the same number, top and bottom, means no compression.

3
  • 3
    It may be better to inspect the response headers. This method does not say whether gzip compression is begin used or some other compression algorithm.
    – Samuel
    Apr 28, 2014 at 20:30
  • 4
    In Chrome Developer Tools on the Network tab, click on the asset name/link for the request and you can inspect the Response Headers like so and see gzip for the Content-Encoding key ![screenshot][1] [1]: i.stack.imgur.com/Bpb5W.png(http://content.screencast.com/users/…
    – d48
    Aug 4, 2014 at 18:39
  • 4
    The recent chrome versions (Version 44.0.2403.130 m) do not seem to show the size/content details - I mean the gzip details - i.imgur.com/MTz7DCM.png. Does anyone know the reason why? Aug 12, 2015 at 8:57
36

See in the response headers. In FireFox you may check with Firebug.

Content-Encoding    gzip

If server supports gzip content then this should be displayed.

2
  • 9
    You only get this if your client has sent "Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate" Jul 10, 2012 at 14:11
  • 2
    Hard refresh to see the original file's encoding, as when the file is served with status 304, it seems that the cached version is already unzipped! (in my case, I'm seeing an ETag header rather than Content-Encoding)
    – ptim
    Sep 23, 2014 at 8:06
22

In new version of chrome, Developer tools > network, you can right click on Column name, and select content-encoding option and add that column (black box in image).

and if you want to see the size of that gzip content, as @Outfast Source - than you can click on icon which is next to View (displayed as Green box in image).

so you can see which content is gzip enabled.

enter image description here

1
  • 2
    This is a great answer, but <kbd>Content-Encoding</kbd> has moved under <kbd>Response Headers</kbd>. Dec 10, 2018 at 5:09
11

You could quickly use a web service like: http://www.whatsmyip.org/http-compression-test/

Google Chrome's "Audits" tool in the developer tools comes in handy as well.

0
9

I wrote this script based on the zoul's answer:

#!/bin/bash

URL=$1
PLAIN="$(curl $URL --silent --write-out "%{size_download}\n" --output /dev/null)"
GZIPPED="$(curl $URL --silent -H "Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate" --write-out "%{size_download}\n" --output /dev/null)"

if test $PLAIN -gt $GZIPPED
then echo "supported"
else echo "unsupported"
fi

example:

$ ./script.sh https://example.com/
0
2

Here's my one-liner:

curl https://google.com --silent -L -H "Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate" --output testFile && file testFile

The file command line tool tells you what type of file it is. You should see this:

testFile: gzip compressed data, max compression, original size modulo 2^32 13926
1
  • one of the best suggestions, completely underrated
    – darryn.ten
    Aug 3, 2023 at 6:06
2

since it's first search result in google, I'm going to edit one of the answers to include Brotli compression too, its short name is br and you can use it with curl or watch for it via F12 in browser.

for curl edited from @zoul answer:

$ curl http://example.com/ --silent --write-out "%{size_download}\n" --output /dev/null
31032
$ curl http://example.com/ --silent -H "Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate,br" --write-out "%{size_download}\n" --output /dev/null
2553
2
  • 1
    And since the underlying library also supports zstd you can check for that as well: "Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate,br,zstd". If one just wants to check if any compression is supported then curl https://example.com/ --silent --compressed --head | grep content-encoding will do the job by looking at just the headers returned. For a specific compression's support Accept-Encoding the one you are looking for.
    – jwd630
    Feb 10 at 22:50
  • @jwd630 nice! Thanks for the compression check command! Feb 13 at 12:55

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