You can have your IIS7 do static and dynamic compression though, and Squid will 
pass it.

Extra hoop to jump through (From my internal wiki):
------------------------------------------------------
If you enable compression in IIS7, it won't compress for HTTP/1.0 clients, 
since encoding support in HTTP/1.0 is flaky. If we use Squid (and squid can 
handle it), you can force IIS7 to do compression anyway: 

c:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\appcmd.exe set config -section:httpCompression -
noCompressionForHttp10:false
c:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\appcmd.exe set config -section:httpCompression -
noCompressionForProxies:false
iisreset
------------------------------------------------------

-- 

 
With kind regards,
 
 
Angelo Höngens
 
Systems Administrator
 
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NetMatch
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------------------------------------------

> -----Original Message-----
> From: yaoxing zhang [mailto:[email protected]]
> Sent: donderdag 19 november 2009 9:08
> To: sqlcamel
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [squid-users] Gzip Supporting
> 
> got it, thanks.
> 
> Regards,
> YX
> 
> On 2009年11月19日 14:51, sqlcamel wrote:
> > yaoxing zhang:
> >> Hello everyone,
> >> I'm using squid 3.0 stable 16 as a accelerator for my IIS 7.0
> server.
> >> And I find that squid does not enable gzip for compressing, which
> >> increases a lot of internet traffic. I can't find any option with
> >> which I can enable gzip. Can anyone help me?
> >
> > AFAIK, only Squid-3.1 with ecap support can enable the external gzip
> > module.
> >
> >

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