Compressing served files is a very usual trick to increase the loading performance of a website. The principle, defined in HTTP 1.1, is quite simple: when requesting a file, the browser announces the encoding it accepts in the Accept-Encoding header (for instance gzip ) and thanks to it, the server knows how it can serve the file.

Typically, this is done on the fly by the web server with a dedicated module, for instance in Apache, mod_deflate does that pretty well (I've been using it for years (fr)) and nowadays this requires almost no configuration besides being activated unless you want to support the venerable most-hated browser of all time aka Internet Explorer 6 :)

Alternatively, it's possible to pre-generate compressed files along with the normal ones to serve the best one supported by the browser visiting your website. This has the advantage of requiring almost no resource on the web server while allowing you to use the highest compression level available even this takes a bit of time. And depending on the static site generator this is maybe super simple to setup.

So in this post, I'm gonna try to compress each page with Gzip and Brotli and to configure Apache to serve the best possible version.

Brotli ?

According to Wikipedia:

Brotli is a data format specification for data streams compressed with a specific combination of the general-purpose LZ77 lossless compression algorithm, Huffman coding and 2nd order context modelling. [...] Brotli was first released in 2015 for off-line compression of web fonts. The version of Brotli released in September 2015 by the Google software engineers contained enhancements in generic lossless data compression, with particular emphasis on use for HTTP compression.

If I believe caniuse.com, Brotli is now supported by most browsers. As usual, only Internet Explorer (11 and below) and Safari (before High Sierra) are a bit behind so for those and for probably tons of bots out there, Gzip compressed files or uncompressed files are still useful.

Brotli files are said to offer a higher compression rate than Gzip while remaining fast to decode. On the other hand, Brotli is also known to be slower to compress especially if you are using the highest compression level. Let's have a look at that.

Compressing files

Since I'm using Metalsmith to generate this web site, I can use metalsmith-gzip and metalsmith-brotli to compress generated documents. Both plugins are very similar and are configured to compress files matching the regular expression /\.[html|css|js|json|xml|svg|txt]/ . I just had to configure metalsmith-gzip to compress at level 9 instead of 6 by default.

If you use Metalsmith, that's pretty much it! Of course, it's possible to do the same with a "simple" shell oneliner, something like:

find path/to/files - type f -a \( -name '*.html' -o -name '*.css' -o -name '*.js' \ -o -name '*.json' -o -name '*.xml' -o -name '*.svg' -o -name '*.txt' \) \ - exec brotli --best {} \+ - exec gzip --best -k {} \+

Apache configuration

This part is a bit tricky, at least it took me some time to figure it out, especially the part about preventing the double compression when you still need mod_deflate for other websites.

First, you need to make sure that mod_mime, mod_headers and mod_rewrite are enabled in Apache. Under Debian, if you are unsure just run as root:

Then, the VirtualHost for your website requires a bit of configuration. Here is the relevant configuration excerpt for serving my pre-compressed website:

RemoveLanguage .br AddEncoding br .br RemoveType .gz AddEncoding x-gzip .gz AddType "text/html" .html.br .htm.br .html.gz .htm.gz AddType "text/css" .css.br css.gz AddType "text/plain" .txt.br txt.gz AddType "text/xml" .xml.br .xml.gz AddType "application/javascript" .js.br .js.gz AddType "application/json" .json.br .json.gz AddType "image/svg+xml" .svg.br .svg.gz Header append Vary Accept-Encoding RewriteEngine On RewriteCond %{HTTP:Accept-Encoding} br RewriteCond %{DOCUMENT_ROOT} / %{REQUEST_FILENAME} .br -s RewriteRule ^(.*)$ %{DOCUMENT_ROOT} / %{REQUEST_FILENAME} .br RewriteCond %{HTTP:Accept-Encoding} gzip RewriteCond %{DOCUMENT_ROOT} / %{REQUEST_FILENAME} .gz -s RewriteRule ^(.*)$ %{DOCUMENT_ROOT} / %{REQUEST_FILENAME} .gz

So to explain it shortly:

this changes the configuration so that .br and .gz files have the same type for Apache as the ones without those suffixes. This has to be in sync with what is done by the static site generator or your shell script.

and files have the same type for Apache as the ones without those suffixes. This has to be in sync with what is done by the static site generator or your shell script. if a browser accepts Brotli compressed files and the requested file exists with a .br suffix, serve this file.

suffix, serve this file. if a browser accepts Gzip compressed files and the requested file exists with a .gz suffix, serve this file.

suffix, serve this file. in both cases, if the file with the suffix is served, the no-gzip environment variable is set so that mod_deflate does not try to compress again the file.

And that's it for serving pre-compressed files! You can see in the network panel that files are now served with Content-Encoding: br and maybe loading feels a bit snappier.

Some stats

This little experiment is a good opportunity to look at some numbers about Gzip vs. Brotli vs. no compression.

Time to compress files

At their maximum compression level, Brotli is way slower than Gzip. At the time of writing, 1452 files are matching the regular expression mentioned above. On my Macbook pro, metalsmith-gzip takes less than 400 milliseconds to compress those while for Brotli, this takes almost 6 seconds! Using the shell version, I find out that it takes almost 24 seconds to compress those files with Brotli and a bit more than 1 second for Gzip.

Even if in this setup, this does not matter much, it's interesting to note that the difference is somehow of an order of magnitude.

Resulting sizes

After all, that's the point of compressing, so let's have a look at the resulting size of some files (unless mentioned, sizes are in bytes).

File(s) Size Gzip Brotli Gzip - Brotli Homepage 8293 2399 29% 1991 24% -408 RSS feed 57368 19636 34% 16998 30% -2638 Main stylesheet 10943 3034 28% 2591 24% -443 robots.txt 24 44 183% 28 117% -16 Posts index 6772 1892 28% 1587 23% -305 Latest post in English 13814 4437 32% 3681 27% -756 Total 11.65Mb 4Mb 34% 3.4Mb 29% -579Kb

Almost no surprise here, Brotli compressed files are about 5% (of the initial size) smaller than the Gzipped one. Given that most of my pages are quite small already, that's not a lot in absolute value but still an interesting gain. Only exceptions to that are very small files like my robots.txt where compressed ones are bigger than the original. So for the sake of completeness, I should not compress those but we are talking of 4 or 20 bytes depending on the algorithm :)