app/django/middleware/gzip.py
author Lennard de Rijk <ljvderijk@gmail.com>
Wed, 09 Sep 2009 21:14:22 +0200
changeset 2895 cad75f6ba411
parent 54 03e267d67478
permissions -rw-r--r--
Added the GHOP modules to the callback. The ENABLE_MODULE has been added to ensure that the current build does not suffer from any weird artefacts that might occur due to the presence of this module. Of course in time it will be removed. Thanks Madhusudan for getting us this far ^_^. Minor CSS and image patches should follow shortly.

import re

from django.utils.text import compress_string
from django.utils.cache import patch_vary_headers

re_accepts_gzip = re.compile(r'\bgzip\b')

class GZipMiddleware(object):
    """
    This middleware compresses content if the browser allows gzip compression.
    It sets the Vary header accordingly, so that caches will base their storage
    on the Accept-Encoding header.
    """
    def process_response(self, request, response):
        # It's not worth compressing non-OK or really short responses.
        if response.status_code != 200 or len(response.content) < 200:
            return response

        patch_vary_headers(response, ('Accept-Encoding',))

        # Avoid gzipping if we've already got a content-encoding.
        if response.has_header('Content-Encoding'):
            return response

        # Older versions of IE have issues with gzipped pages containing either
        # Javascript and PDF.
        if "msie" in request.META.get('HTTP_USER_AGENT', '').lower():
            ctype = response.get('Content-Type', '').lower()
            if "javascript" in ctype or ctype == "application/pdf":
                return response

        ae = request.META.get('HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING', '')
        if not re_accepts_gzip.search(ae):
            return response

        response.content = compress_string(response.content)
        response['Content-Encoding'] = 'gzip'
        response['Content-Length'] = str(len(response.content))
        return response