37

What are the ways by which we can reduce the size of the HTML Response sent by an asp.net application?

I am using Controls which are not owned by me and it produces output with white spaces. I am interested in Minifying the entire HTML output of the page just like how google does (View source www.google.com) to improve the timing.

Is there any Utility classes available for ASP.NET which can do this stuff for me?

7 Answers 7

32

There is no need to do it at run time. Because it can be done at compile time.

Details: http://omari-o.blogspot.com/2009/09/aspnet-white-space-cleaning-with-no.html

7
  • Great link. This was my solution for stackoverflow.com/questions/7121371/… Aug 19, 2011 at 15:22
  • How did you apply this in the project? Sorry for my ignorance, but I can't make it work. Apr 13, 2012 at 9:06
  • @ryan What errors do you get? Have you specified pageParserFilterType in web.config?
    – thorn0
    Apr 13, 2012 at 13:56
  • I got it :-) I just have to add <pages pageParserFilterType="Omari.Web.UI.WhiteSpaceCleaner, WhiteSpaceCleanerForWebFormsAndMVC3" controlRenderingCompatibilityVersion="3.5" clientIDMode="AutoID"> and set debug = false. Apr 14, 2012 at 7:15
  • 8
    While the linked blog post is still there, the link to the code on the blog post is now broken. Dec 16, 2014 at 13:58
20

Try HTTP module as described here: http://madskristensen.net/post/a-whitespace-removal-http-module-for-aspnet-20

2
  • 1
    Broken url, project seems no longer valid. Jun 23, 2010 at 11:53
  • Note: This only works if the request ends with .aspx but you can modify the code
    – Bolo
    Mar 10, 2016 at 20:57
10

For Microsoft .NET platform there is a library called the WebMarkupMin, which produces the minification of HTML code. For each ASP.NET framework has its own module:

Documentation is available at - http://webmarkupmin.codeplex.com/documentation

4
6

I want to comment on Thorn's suggestion (but I'm new to stack overflow).

  1. The linked code (omari-o.blogspot.com) doesn't support MVC4, and although the code is open source it cannot easily be upgraded because of braking changes between MVC3 and MVC4.

  2. There might be whitespaces written to the http result at runtime, only the developer of the actual site can know that. Thus static minification of template files (aspx) is not foolproof at all. Dynamic minification, which is suggested by gius, should be used to guarantee that whitespaces are removed correctly, and unfortunately this will incur a runtime computation cost. If code dynamically writes spaces to the output, it will have to be removed dynamically.

3

The accepted answer does not work with MVC 4, so here is a similar lib that minifies at build-time https://github.com/jitbit/HtmlOptimizerMvc4

2
  • did you have any problems with VS stopping to recognize @model in your views ?
    – Veverke
    Feb 24, 2015 at 16:04
  • 1
    Why did you post a forked version without any modifications?
    – Dehli
    Nov 11, 2015 at 21:32
2

Just adding another option I do not see listed here, which is the one I was recommended using:

Html minifier command line tool

Usage: here and here

There is an issue, however, with this tool: it leaves single line (//) comments, and it causes problems for Razor parsing, since a single line comment placed within a C# block like the following:

@{
  ... 
  ...
  // anything
  ...
}

will cause the minification output rest of the line, from this point on, to be ignored by the Razor parser, which will thus raise an error stating there it could not find the closing "}" for the block.

My workaround for this issue was to completely removing these comments from the output. This way it works. To do that, simply remove the RegexOptions.SingleLine from line 145:

htmlContents = Regex.Replace(htmlContents, @"//(.*?)\r?\n", ""/*, RegexOptions.Singleline*/);
1
0

Use this function in behind of master page or web form page, before Page_Load event:

protected override void Render(HtmlTextWriter writer)
{
    if (this.Request.Headers["X-MicrosoftAjax"] != "Delta=true")
    {
        System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex reg = new System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex(@"<script[^>]*>[\w|\t|\r|\W]*?</script>");
        System.Text.StringBuilder sb = new System.Text.StringBuilder();
        System.IO.StringWriter sw = new System.IO.StringWriter(sb);
        HtmlTextWriter hw = new HtmlTextWriter(sw);
        base.Render(hw);
        string html = sb.ToString();
        System.Text.RegularExpressions.MatchCollection mymatch = reg.Matches(html);
        html = reg.Replace(html, string.Empty);
        reg = new System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex(@"(?<=[^])\t{2,}|(?<=[>])\s{2,}(?=[<])|(?<=[>])\s{2,11}(?=[<])|(?=[\n])\s{2,}|(?=[\r])\s{2,}");
        html = reg.Replace(html, string.Empty);
        reg = new System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex(@"</body>");
        string str = string.Empty;
        foreach (System.Text.RegularExpressions.Match match in mymatch)
        {
            str += match.ToString();
        }
        html = reg.Replace(html, str + "</body>");
        writer.Write(html);
    }
    else
    {
        base.Render(writer);
    }
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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