I recommend using curl or wget and request gzipped content (add accept-encoding: gzip header). Then you'll actually get gzip stored on your disk, and you'll have to gunzip the content manually.
Stefan 2015-01-12 8:15 GMT+01:00 Christoph Läubrich <[email protected]>: > Gzip must be requested by the client, have you checked that the client > actually request compressed data? What client do you use? > Also make sure your files have proper mime types and try to enable only > for a specific mime type to test. > > Beside this: How do you verify that content is Gzipped? Some versions of > IE+Firebug Console do not report the gzip content type. So you should > actually check with wire-shark or a simple java test client (just make sure > to request compression!) > > Am 11.01.2015 20:14, schrieb Andrew Penhorwood: > >> I am using jetty9.2.6. The site has ran for months without issue on the >> Jetty 9.2.x codes bases. I decided to audit the site to see if there were >> things we could do to make it more efficient. One of those things was >> enabling gzip. So I added the gzip filter to to my webdefault.xml file. >> >> > _______________________________________________ > jetty-users mailing list > [email protected] > To change your delivery options, retrieve your password, or unsubscribe > from this list, visit > https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/jetty-users > -- BEKK Open http://open.bekk.no TesTcl - a unit test framework for iRules http://testcl.com
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