46
votes

I want to send a compressed POST data with Javascript to a server I control. Is there any way to let the HTTP layer deal with the compression.

I'm sending JSON. If I set the content type to GZIP/deflate will the browser automatically compress it and then Apache with the deflate mod automatically decompress it so my application doesn't have to think about the data being compressed at all?

I know it can work the other way around but any way to make it work this way?

3

3 Answers

78
votes

Will the browser automatically gzip-encode your data for you? The short answer is no.

The long answer is that some user-agents can do things like this, but you definitely can't rely on it. The apache mod_deflate docs state:

some special applications actually do support request compression, for instance some WebDAV clients.

So, no, that's not going to work. You'll need to generate the appropriate HTTP request message yourself. The appropriate header in this case is Content-Encoding: gzip and NOT Content-Type: because the content itself is application/json, you're just looking to encode the entity body of your HTTP request message for transport.

Note that you need to also add the appropriate Content-Length: header specifying the size in bytes of the message entity body after compression -OR- send your HTTP message using Transfer-Encoding: chunked and forego the content-length specification.

On the receiving end, you can instruct mod_deflate to use an input filter to decompress the information:

<Location /dav-area>
SetInputFilter DEFLATE
</Location>

This is a bit heavy handed if you're only receiving compressed message bodies for a couple of resources. Instead, you should probably just use the client-side script to check for the Content-Encoding: gzip header and decompress the request body manually. How to do this in say, PHP, is another question entirely. If you need details for that you should post another question.

16
votes

It's possible, but I would recommend strongly against accepting gzipped data incoming to your server. The main reason is to prevent your server from getting gzip bombed. It's generally not possible to know what the uncompressed data looks like before actually uncompressing it, so a user could send you a web request that looks like a harmless 1 KB or 1 MB of data but is really 100 GB of data, and then your web server (nginx or apache) hangs the next 10 minutes trying to decompress it all, eventually running out of memory/locking up.

-1
votes

Just achieved this using https://github.com/dankogai/js-deflate However the postdata for whatever reason will strip the + signs and replace them with spaces.

To send the data via javascript:

params.mapdata=  btoa(RawDeflate.deflate(JSON.stringify(mapdata)));

To receive the data via php:

$value = gzinflate(base64_decode(preg_replace('/\s/', '+',$value)));