Reputation: 89312
zOompf has completed some very thorough research on this very topic here. It trumps any findings below.
HTTP 1.1 definitions of GZIP and DEFLATE (zlib) for some background information:
" 'Gzip' is the gzip format, and 'deflate' is the zlib format. They should probably have called the second one 'zlib' instead to avoid confusion with the raw deflate compressed data format. While the HTTP 1.1 RFC 2616 correctly points to the zlib specification in RFC 1950 for the 'deflate' transfer encoding, there have been reports of servers and browsers that incorrectly produce or expect raw deflate data per the deflate specification in RFC 1951, most notably Microsoft products. So even though the 'deflate' transfer encoding using the zlib format would be the more efficient approach (and in fact exactly what the zlib format was designed for), using the 'gzip' transfer encoding is probably more reliable due to an unfortunate choice of name on the part of the HTTP 1.1 authors." (source: http://www.gzip.org/zlib/zlib_faq.html)
So, my question: if I send RAW deflate data with NO zlib wrapper (or gzip, for that matter) are there any modern browsers (e.g., IE6 and up, FF, Chrome, Safari, etc) that can NOT understand the raw deflate compressed data (assuming HTTP request header "Accept-Encoding" contains "deflate")?
Deflate data will ALWAYS be a few bytes smaller than GZIP.
If all these browsers can successfully decode the data, what downsides are there to sending RAW deflate instead of zlib?
Upvotes: 91
Views: 38868
Reputation: 89312
Check http://www.vervestudios.co/projects/compression-tests/results for more results.
Here are the browsers that have been tested:
/* Browser DEFLATE ZLIB */
XP Internet Explorer 6 PASS FAIL
XP Internet Explorer 7 PASS FAIL
XP Internet Explorer 8 PASS FAIL
Vista Internet Explorer 8 PASS FAIL
XP Firefox 3.6.* PASS PASS
XP Firefox 3.5.3 PASS PASS
XP Firefox 3.0.14 PASS PASS
Win 7 Firefox 3.6.* PASS PASS
Vista Firefox 3.6.* PASS PASS
Vista Firefox 3.5.3 PASS PASS
XP Safari 3 PASS PASS
XP Safari 4 PASS PASS
XP Chrome 3.0.195.27 PASS PASS
XP Opera 9 PASS PASS
XP Opera 10 PASS PASS
XP Sea Monkey 1.1.8 PASS PASS
Android 1.6 Browser (v4)* N/A N/A
OS-X Safari 4 PASS PASS
OS X Chrome 7.0.517.44 PASS PASS
OS X Opera 10.63 PASS PASS
iPhone 3.1 Safari PASS PASS
* Android Sends HTTP request header "Accept-Encoding: gzip". Deflate is not permitted.
I conclude that we can always send raw DEFLATE (when the HTTP request header "Accept-Encoding" contains "deflate") and the browser will be able to correctly interpret the encoded data. Can someone prove this wrong?
note: .NET's native implementation of DEFLATE (System.IO.Compression.DeflateStream) is raw DEFLATE. It also sucks. Please use zlib.net for all of your .NET deflating needs.
Upvotes: 37
Reputation: 49142
Isn't it the case that AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE
using mod_deflate sends by gzip by default?
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 74527
The Android 1.6 browser (v4) fails both the zlib and the deflate test on your page. I've added it to your list.
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 4206
as far as i know, yes - pretty much you "can always send raw DEFLATE and everything would be okay"... there is not "always", but most of all cases. if not, this is the browser's problem.
Upvotes: -1