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CompressedStaticFiles

Send compressed static files to the browser without having to compress on demand, also has support for sending more advanced image formats when the browser has support for it.

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NuGet version Nuget run unit tests Coverage Status GitHub license

Table of Contents

About The Project

This project allows you to serve precompressed files to the browser without having to compress on demand, this is achieved by compressing/encoding your content at build time.

Getting Started

Precompress content

Static nonimage files have to be precompressed using Zopfli, Brotli and/or ZStandard, see the example for how to do it with gulp. The files must have the exact same filename as the source + .br or .gzip (index.html would be index.html.br for the Brotli version and index.html.zst for Zstandard).

Encode images

Modern browsers support new image formats like webp and avif they can store more pixels per byte. You can convert your images using the following tools webp and libavif. The files must have the same filename as the source but with a new file extension (image.jpg would be image.webp for the webp version).

ASP.NET

Add AddCompressedStaticFiles() in your Startup.ConfigureServices() method. Replace UseStaticFiles(); with UseCompressedStaticFiles(); in Startup.Configure(). By default CompressedStaticFiles is configured to allow slightly larger files for some image formats as they can store more pixels per byte, this can be disabled by calling CompressedStaticFileOptions.RemoveImageSubstitutionCostRatio().

Example

A example can be found in the Example directory. By using this package the Lighthouse mobile performance went from 76 to 98 and the transferred size went from 526 kb to 141 kb.

Acknowledgements

This solution is based on @neyromant from the following issue dotnet/aspnetcore#1584 (comment).