Alors que je ne l'ai pas écrit de nombreux nouveaux articles récemment, j'ai passé beaucoup de temps la mise à jour et la révision du côté derrière les coulisses des choses, à savoir différents services de sécurité (TLS) paramètres de mon VPS qui héberge plusieurs sites dont celui-ci. Une autre chose que j'ai aussi travaillé à améliorer est récemment pour améliorer mon utilisation de gzip, et un nouveau format appelé Brötli
Brièvement, gzip (et Brötli) can be used to compress resources before they are sent to the browser, ce qui réduit la quantité de données envoyées, and hence should mean a site loads faster. The downside is that compressing resources takes time, which could outweigh the gains from the smaller sizes. The ideal solution is to have resources compressed in advance, rather than compressed by the http server in realtime. Most of my websites use wordpress which contains lots of files in plugins, thèmes, etc., so going through all of these and manually compressing them everytime there is an update would be impractical. The answer is to use a script which monitors the system for file changes, and creates compressed files as needed. Below is the script I have recently written to do exactly this.
#!/bin/bash inotifywait -m -q -e CREATE -e MODIFY -e MOVED_TO -r "/var / www /" --format "%w% f" -- » Excludei.(jpg|png|gif|ico|bûche|sql|code postal|gz|pdf|php|swf|ttf|EOT|woff|cst|JST|br|EVC)$» | while read file do if [[ $file = ~ \.(css)$ ]]; then fname="${fichier%.*}" si [ -fa "$FNAME".min.css ] then rm -f $file.gz rm -f $file.br zopfli --gzip $file bro --quality 11 --input $file --output $file.br chmod 664 $file.br chmod 664 $file.gz chown wordpress:wordpress $file.br chown wordpress:wordpress $file.gz else rm -f $file.gz rm -f $file.br cat $file | CleanCSS > $fname.cst cat $file | CleanCSS | bro --Quality 11 --output $file.br zopfli --gzip $fname.cst -c > $fname.css.gz chmod 664 $file.br chmod 664 $file.gz chown wordpress:wordpress $file.br chown wordpress:wordpress $file.gz rm -f $fname.cst fi fi if [[ $file = ~ \.(js)$ ]]; then fname="${fichier%.*}" si [ -fa "$FNAME".min.css ] then rm -f $file.gz rm -f $file.br zopfli --gzip $file bro --quality 11 --input $file --output $file.br chmod 664 $file.br chmod 664 $file.gz chown wordpress:wordpress $file.br chown wordpress:wordpress $file.gz else rm -f $file.gz rm -f $file.br uglifyjs $fname.js > $fname.jst zopfli --gzip $fname.jst -c > $fname.js.gz bro --quality 11 --input $fname.jst --output $file.br chmod 664 $file.br chmod 664 $file.gz chown wordpress:wordpress $file.br chown wordpress:wordpress $file.gz rm -f $fname.jst fi fi origfs=$(wc -c < "$dossier") gzfs = $(wc -c <"$fichier.gz") BRFS = $(wc -c <"$file.br") si [ "$origfs" -lt "$gzfs" ]; then rm $file.gz -f fi if [ "$origfs" -lt "$BRFS" ]; then rm $file.br -f fi done
“Hi James I realise it has been a long while, but I just checked this on windows 11 (build 23H2)…”