LoadModule pagespeed_module modules/mod_pagespeed.so # Only attempt to load mod_deflate if it hasn't been loaded already. LoadModule deflate_module modules/mod_deflate.so # Turn on mod_pagespeed. To completely disable mod_pagespeed, you # can set this to "off". ModPagespeed on # Direct Apache to send all HTML output to the mod_pagespeed # output handler. AddOutputFilterByType MOD_PAGESPEED_OUTPUT_FILTER text/html # The ModPagespeedFileCachePath and # ModPagespeedGeneratedFilePrefix directories must exist and be # writable by the apache user (as specified by the User # directive). # Here the vanilla conf. I cannot understand the @@NAME@@ syntax!!! # ModPagespeedFileCachePath "@@MODPAGESPEED_CACHE_ROOT@@/cache/" # ModPagespeedGeneratedFilePrefix "@@MODPAGESPEED_CACHE_ROOT@@/files/" ModPagespeedFileCachePath "/var/cache/mod_pagespeed/cache/" ModPagespeedGeneratedFilePrefix "/var/cache/mod_pagespeed/files/" # Override the mod_pagespeed 'rewrite level'. The default level # "CoreFilters" uses a set of rewrite filters that are generally # safe for most web pages. Most sites should not need to change # this value and can instead fine-tune the configuration using the # ModPagespeedDisableFilters and ModPagespeedEnableFilters # directives, below. Valid values for ModPagespeedRewriteLevel are # PassThrough, CoreFilters and TestingCoreFilters. # # ModPagespeedRewriteLevel PassThrough # Explicitly disables specific filters. This is useful in # conjuction with ModPagespeedRewriteLevel. For instance, if one # of the filters in the CoreFilters needs to be disabled for a # site, that filter can be added to # ModPagespeedDisableFilters. This directive contains a # comma-separated list of filter names, and can be repeated. # # ModPagespeedDisableFilters rewrite_images # Explicitly enables specific filters. This is useful in # conjuction with ModPagespeedRewriteLevel. For instance, filters # not included in the CoreFilters may be enabled using this # directive. This directive contains a comma-separated list of # filter names, and can be repeated. # # ModPagespeedEnableFilters rewrite_javascript,rewrite_css # ModPagespeedEnableFilters collapse_whitespace,elide_attributes # ===================================================================== # Test # Uncomment the following lines to reproduce the example at: # http://code.google.com/intl/en-US/speed/page-speed/docs/filter-css-rewrite.html ModPagespeedEnableFilters rewrite_css # ===================================================================== # ModPagespeedDomain # authorizes rewriting of JS, CSS, and Image files found in this # domain. By default only resources with the same origin as the # HTML file are rewritten. For example: # # ModPagespeedDomain cdn.myhost.com # # This will allow resources found on http://cdn.myhost.com to be # rewritten in addition to those in the same domain as the HTML. # # Wildcards (* and ?) are allowed in the domain specification. Be # careful when using them as if you rewrite domains that do not # send you traffic, then the site receiving the traffic will not # know how to serve the rewritten content. # Other defaults (cache sizes and thresholds): # # ModPagespeedFileCacheSizeKb 102400 # ModPagespeedFileCacheCleanIntervalMs 3600000 # ModPagespeedLRUCacheKbPerProcess 1024 # ModPagespeedLRUCacheByteLimit 16384 # ModPagespeedCssInlineMaxBytes 2048 # ModPagespeedImgInlineMaxBytes 2048 # ModPagespeedJsInlineMaxBytes 2048 # ModPagespeedCssOutlineMinBytes 3000 # ModPagespeedJsOutlineMinBytes 3000 # Bound the number of images that can be rewritten at any one time; this # avoids overloading the CPU. Set this to 0 to remove the bound. # # ModPagespeedImgMaxRewritesAtOnce 8 # When Apache is set up as a browser proxy, mod_pagespeed can record # web-sites as they are requested, so that an image of the web is built up # in the directory of the proxy administrator's choosing. When ReadOnly is # on, only files already present in the SlurpDirectory are served by the # proxy. # # ModPagespeedSlurpDirectory ... # ModPagespeedSlurpReadOnly on # The maximum URL size is generally limited to about 2k characters # due to IE: See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/208427/EN-US. # Apache servers by default impose a further limitation of about # 250 characters per URL segment (text between slashes). # mod_pagespeed circumvents this limitation, but if you employ # proxy servers in your path you may need to re-impose it by # overriding the setting here. The default setting is 1024 # characters. # # ModPagespeedMaxSegmentLength 250 # Uncomment this if you want to prevent mod_pagespeed from combining files # (e.g. CSS files) across paths # # ModPagespeedCombineAcrossPaths off # Enables server-side instrumentation and statistics. If this rewriter is # enabled, then each rewritten HTML page will have instrumentation javacript # added that sends latency beacons to /mod_pagespeed_beacon. These # statistics can be accessed at /mod_pagespeed_statistics. You must also # enable the mod_pagespeed_statistics and mod_pagespeed_beacon handlers # below. # # ModPagespeedEnableFilters add_instrumentation # This handles the client-side instrumentation callbacks which are injected # by the add_instrumentation filter. # You can use a different location by adding the ModPagespeedBeaconUrl # directive; see the documentation on add_instrumentation. SetHandler mod_pagespeed_beacon # Uncomment the following line if you want to disable statistics entirely. # # ModPagespeedStatistics off # This page lets you view statistics about the mod_pagespeed module. Order allow,deny # You may insert other "Allow from" lines to add hosts you want to # allow to look at generated statistics. Another possibility is # to comment out the "Order" and "Allow" options from the config # file, to allow any client that can reach your server to examine # statistics. This might be appropriate in an experimental setup or # if the Apache server is protected by a reverse proxy that will # filter URLs in some fashion. Allow from localhost SetHandler mod_pagespeed_statistics