Guess servlet filter is the way to go, sorry for being
clueless about existing code.

--- "Enke, Michael" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Bart Guijt wrote:
> > 
> > Hi all,
> > 
> > I'm interested to see whether the following
> technique is useful for Cocoon apps as well:
> compressing requested content if the client supports
> it. The article at the following
> > link illustrates this best:
> > 
> > 
> >    
> http://www.servletsuite.com/servlets/compress.htm
> > 
> > 
> > I browsed the Cocoon sources to see whether
> something like this was already implemented, but
> apparantly it's not.
> > 
> > Has anybody used this before? What are your
> experiences?
> > 
> > 
> > Ciao,
> > 
> > Bart Guijt
> 
> 
> Put this lines into your web.xml:
> 
>   <filter>
>     <filter-name>Compression Filter</filter-name>
>    
>
<filter-class>compressionFilters.CompressionFilter</filter-class>
>     <init-param>
>       <param-name>compressionThreshold</param-name>
>       <param-value>10</param-value>
>     </init-param>
>   </filter>
>  
>   <filter-mapping>
>     <filter-name>Compression Filter</filter-name>
>     <url-pattern>*.gnumeric</url-pattern>
>   </filter-mapping>
>   <filter-mapping>
>     <filter-name>Compression Filter</filter-name>
>     <url-pattern>*.gz</url-pattern>
>   </filter-mapping>
> 
> If you use tomcat, put
> webapps/examples/WEB-INF/classes/compressionFilters
> into WEB-INF/classes
> 
> That's all.
> 
> It is submitted to bugzilla as a patch to web.xml.
> 
> Michael
> 
>
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