The ASP.NET Capsule #24: Examine Output Compression
Hi all.
After an interesting discussion with Cristian Prieto (ASP.NET MVP) he pointed me in the right direction of a problem I was having.
The issue was with a web application I recently published to IIS. A new page I added was throwing an exception but instead of showing the error as I would expect, it was throwing a lot of garbage:
Now, the problem was that I didn’t have a way to find what the real problem was until he said that the output was probably being compressed, so after following his advice I checked with Firebug and the results were:
If you see the header Content-Encoding the value is gzip. That was a clear indicator of the output being compressed.
I checked the IIS7 settings and compression was not enabled, so I checked the Global.asax file and this is what I found:
1: protected void Application_BeginRequest(object sender, EventArgs e)
2: {
3: if (Request.RawUrl.Contains(".aspx") && (Request.Headers["Accept-Encoding"] != null))
4: {
5: if (Request.Headers["Accept-Encoding"].ToLower().Contains("gzip"))
6: {
7: Response.Filter = new System.IO.Compression.GZipStream(Response.Filter, CompressionMode.Compress, true);
8: Response.AppendHeader("Content-Encoding", "gzip");
9: }
10: }
11: }
After a couple of small refactorings thanks to ReSharper:
1: protected void Application_BeginRequest(object sender, EventArgs e)
2: {
3: if (!Request.RawUrl.Contains(".aspx") || (Request.Headers["Accept-Encoding"] == null)) return;
4: if (!Request.Headers["Accept-Encoding"].ToLower().Contains("gzip")) return;
5: Response.Filter = new System.IO.Compression.GZipStream(Response.Filter, CompressionMode.Compress, true);
6: Response.AppendHeader("Content-Encoding", "gzip");
7: }
I was now able to disable output compression and see what the issue was. After solving the problem I enabled it again and things work as expected.
Checkout Cristian’s blog post about output compression (in Spanish).
Enjoy!
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