Middleware for connect: serves compressed files if they exist, falls through to connect-static if they don't, or if browser does not send 'Accept-Encoding' header.
You should use connect-gzip-static
if your build process already creates compressed (using gzip,
brotli, or zstd) files. If you want to compress your data on the fly use compression
middleware. And if you want to compress your files dynamically you may want to look up connect
gzip.
$ npm install connect-gzip-static
gzip-static is meant to be a drop in replacement for connect static middleware. Use the same options as you would with connect static.
var gzipStatic = require('connect-gzip-static');
var oneDay = 86400000;
connect()
.use(gzipStatic(__dirname + '/public'))
connect()
.use(gzipStatic(__dirname + '/public', { maxAge: oneDay }))
We start by locating all compressed files (ie. files with .gz and .br extensions) in root
directory. All HTTP GET and HTTP HEAD requests with Accept-Encoding header set to gzip are checked
against the list of compressed files and, if possible, fulfilled by returning the compressed
versions. If compressed version is not found or if the request does not have an appropriate Accept-
Encoding header, the request is processed in the same way as standard static middleware would
handle it.
This project uses debug module. To enable the debug log, just set the debug enviromental variable:
DEBUG="connect:gzip-static"
MIT © Damian Krzeminski