--- title: Serving pre-compressed files in Caddy 2 excerpt: gzip and brotli files date: 2020-11-12 tags: - caddy --- Caddy v0.9.4+ and v1.0.0+ support pre-compressed gzip and brotli files automatically. However, this feature is [not yet](https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/2665) implemented in v2 and requires manual configuration. Examples available at the Caddy forum are incomplete, it's either gzip or brotli. The config provided in this guide supports _both_, prioritising brotli if supported by the requesting web browser (and there are .br files), otherwise fallback to gzip. ## Default usage This configuration supports URL normalisation; when a URL has a trailing slash `http://localhost:8080/about/`, Caddy will serve `http://localhost:8080/about/index.html` using _internal/transparent_ redirect (without 301/302 redirect). If you need to internal redirect `http://localhost:8080/bio` to `http://localhost:8080/bio.html`, refer to the [next section](#Pretty-URLs). ``` plain Caddyfile http://localhost:8080 { bind 127.0.0.1 ::1 root * /home/user/www file_server @brotli { header Accept-Encoding *br* file { try_files {path}.br {path}/index.html.br } } handle @brotli { header Content-Encoding br rewrite {http.matchers.file.relative} } @gzip { header Accept-Encoding *gzip* file { try_files {path}.gz {path}/index.html.gz } } handle @gzip { header Content-Encoding gzip rewrite {http.matchers.file.relative} } @html { file path *.html */ } header @html Content-Type text/html @css { file path *.css } header @css Content-Type text/css @js { file path *.js } header @js Content-Type text/javascript @svg { file path *.svg } header @svg Content-Type image/svg+xml @xml { file path *.xml } header @xml Content-Type application/xmlr } @json { file path *.json } header @json Content-Type application/json } ``` ### Content-Type ``` @svg { file path *.svg } header @svg Content-Type image/svg+xml ``` `Content-Type` response header needs to be specified as a workaround, otherwise Caddy responses with `application/gzip`. ### URL normalisation ``` @html { file path *.html */ } ``` `*/` is to match path with a trailing slash `/path/` since that is (transparently) redirects to `/path/index.html`. ### Dummy files ``` root * /home/user/www ``` I prepared a set of dummy files with most common file extensions ([download](/files/20201112/dummy.zip)). This enables you to test whether Caddy serves the correct file. `.gz` and `.br` files are _not_ compressed files, they are text files so that you can easily identify the file being served. This also means you cannot test it on browsers since the files are not are not actually compressed (you'll get encoding error); also note that web browsers only send `Accept-Encoding: br` request header to HTTPS website. Unzip the dummy.zip and specify the folder in the `root` directive. Following are some sample tests after you start Caddy: ``` $ curl -i http://localhost:8080/foo.svg -H 'Accept-Encoding: gzip' # /foo.svg.gz should be served HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Encoding: gzip Content-Type: image/svg+xml svg gz ``` ``` $ curl -i http://localhost:8080/foo.svg -H 'Accept-Encoding: gzip,br' # /foo.svg.br should be served HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Encoding: br Content-Type: image/svg+xml svg br ``` ``` $ curl -i http://localhost:8080/foo.svg # /foo.svg should be served HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: image/svg+xml svg ``` ## Pretty URLs This configuration supports transparently redirect a URL without trailing slash and file extension, e.g. `http://localhost:8080/bio` to `http://localhost:8080/bio.html`. If you request "bio.html", Caddy still still serve it as usual, without any redirect. This feature is similar to [Netlify's](https://docs.netlify.com/routing/redirects/redirect-options/#trailing-slash). ``` plain Caddyfile http://localhost:8080 { bind 127.0.0.1 ::1 root * /home/user/www file_server try_files {path}.html @brotli { header Accept-Encoding *br* file { try_files {path}.br {path}/index.html.br {path}.html.br } } handle @brotli { header { Content-Encoding br Content-Type text/html } rewrite {http.matchers.file.relative} } @gzip { header Accept-Encoding *gzip* file { try_files {path}.gz {path}/index.html.gz {path}.html.gz } } handle @gzip { header { Content-Encoding gzip Content-Type text/html } rewrite {http.matchers.file.relative} } @html { file path *.html */ } header @html { Content-Type text/html defer } @css { file path *.css } header @css { Content-Type text/css defer } @js { file path *.js } header @js { Content-Type text/javascript defer } @svg { file path *.svg } header @svg { Content-Type image/svg+xml defer } @xml { file path *.xml } header @xml { Content-Type application/xml defer } @json { file path *.json } header @json { Content-Type application/json defer } } ``` Derived from [[1]](https://caddy.community/t/how-to-serve-pre-compressed-files-with-caddy-v2/8760), [[2]](https://caddy.community/t/how-to-serve-gzipped-files-automatically-in-caddy-v2/7311), [[3]](https://caddy.community/t/why-caddy-2-is-not-able-to-serve-static-brotli-files/7653).