Difference between revisions of "How to Enable Gzip Compression"
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Enabling gzip compression is a standard practice. If you are not using it for some reason, your webpages are likely slower than your competitors. | Enabling gzip compression is a standard practice. If you are not using it for some reason, your webpages are likely slower than your competitors. | ||
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Revision as of 17:36, 25 November 2017
Contents
What is Gzip compression?
Gzip is a method of compressing files (making them smaller) for faster network transfers. It is also a file format.
Compression allows your web server to provide smaller file sizes which load faster for your website users.
Enabling gzip compression is a standard practice. If you are not using it for some reason, your webpages are likely slower than your competitors.
How to enable Gzip compression
Compression is enabled via webserver configuration
Here are the most common ways to enable compression including .htaccess, Apache, Nginx, and Litespeed webservers.
Enable compression via .htaccess
For most people reading this, compression is enabled by adding some code to a file called .htaccess on their web host/server. This means going to the file manager (or wherever you go to add or upload files) on your webhost.
The .htaccess file controls many important things for your site. If you are not familiar with the .htaccess file, please read my working with .htaccess article to get some know how before changing it.
The code below should be added to your .htaccess file...
<ifModule mod_gzip.c> mod_gzip_on Yes mod_gzip_dechunk Yes mod_gzip_item_include file .(html?|txt|css|js|php|pl)$ mod_gzip_item_include handler ^cgi-script$ mod_gzip_item_include mime ^text/.* mod_gzip_item_include mime ^application/x-javascript.* mod_gzip_item_exclude mime ^image/.* mod_gzip_item_exclude rspheader ^Content-Encoding:.*gzip.* </ifModule>
Save the .htaccess file and then refresh your webpage.
Enable compression on Apache webservers
The instructions and code above will work on Apache. If they are not working there is another way that may work for you. If the above code did not seem to work, remove it from your .htaccess file and try this one instead...
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/plain AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/html AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/xml AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/css AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/xml AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/xhtml+xml AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/rss+xml AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/javascript AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/x-javascript
Enable compression on NGINX webservers
To enable compression in NGINX you will need to add the following code to your config file
gzip on; gzip_comp_level 2; gzip_http_version 1.0; gzip_proxied any; gzip_min_length 1100; gzip_buffers 16 8k; gzip_types text/plain text/html text/css application/x-javascript text/xml application/xml application/xml+rss text/javascript; # Disable for IE < 6 because there are some known problems gzip_disable "MSIE [1-6].(?!.*SV1)"; # Add a vary header for downstream proxies to avoid sending cached gzipped files to IE6 gzip_vary on;
Enable compression on Litespeed webservers
The ideal way to enable compression in Litespeed is to do it through the configuration under "tuning". Just go down to "enable compression" and check to see if it is on, if not click "edit" then choose to turn it on. While you are there, look over the several Gzip options that are nearby.
How effective is gzip compression?
Compression of your HTML and CSS files with gzip typically saves around fifty to seventy percent of the file size. This means that it takes less time to load your pages, and less bandwidth is used over all.