This section describes how to configure compression or decompression of responses, as well as sending compressed files.
Compressing responses often significantly reduces the size of transmitted data. However, since compression happens at runtime it can also add considerable processing overhead which can negatively affect performance. NGINX performs compression before sending responses to clients, but does not “double compress” responses that are already compressed (for example, by a proxied server).
To enable compression, include the gzip
directive with the on
parameter.
gzip on;
By default, NGINX compresses responses only with MIME type text/html
. To compress responses with other MIME types, include the gzip_types
directive and list the additional types.
gzip_types text/plain application/xml;
To specify the minimum length of the response to compress, use the gzip_min_length
directive. The default is 20 bytes (here adjusted to 1000):
gzip_min_length 1000;
By default, NGINX does not compress responses to proxied requests (requests that come from the proxy server). The fact that a request comes from a proxy server is determined by the presence of the Via
header field in the request. To configure compression of these responses, use the gzip_proxied
directive. The directive has a number of parameters specifying which kinds of proxied requests NGINX should compress. For example, it is reasonable to compress responses only to requests that will not be cached on the proxy server. For this purpose the gzip_proxied
directive has parameters that instruct NGINX to check the Cache-Control
header field in a response and compress the response if the value is no-cache
, no-store
, or private
. In addition, you must include the expired
parameter to check the value of the Expires
header field. These parameters are set in the following example, along with the auth
parameter, which checks for the presence of the Authorization
header field (an authorized response is specific to the end user and is not typically cached):
gzip_proxied no-cache no-store private expired auth;
As with most other directives, the directives that configure compression can be included in the http
context or in a server
or location
configuration block.
The overall configuration of gzip compression might look like this.
server {
gzip on;
gzip_types text/plain application/xml;
gzip_proxied no-cache no-store private expired auth;
gzip_min_length 1000;
...
}
Some clients do not support responses with the gzip
encoding method. At the same time, it might be desirable to store compressed data, or compress responses on the fly and store them in the cache. To successfully serve both clients that do and do not accept compressed data, NGINX can decompress data on the fly when sending it to the latter type of client.
To enable runtime decompression, use the gunzip
directive.
location /storage/ {
gunzip on;
...
}
The gunzip
directive can be specified in the same context as the gzip
directive:
server {
gzip on;
gzip_min_length 1000;
gunzip on;
...
}
Note that this directive is defined in a separate module that might not be included in an open source NGINX build by default.
To send a compressed version of a file to the client instead of the regular one, set the gzip_static
directive to on
within the appropriate context.
location / {
gzip_static on;
}
In this case, to service a request for /path/to/file, NGINX tries to find and send the file /path/to/file.gz. If the file doesn’t exist, or the client does not support gzip, NGINX sends the uncompressed version of the file.
Note that the gzip_static
directive does not enable on-the-fly compression. It merely uses a file compressed beforehand by any compression tool. To compress content (and not only static content) at runtime, use the gzip
directive.
This directive is defined in a separate module that might not be included in an open source NGINX build by default.