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What version of mod_pagespeed are you using?The 5-minute private symptom occurs when the server serving the WEBP files generates a different WEBP file (via md5 sum) than the one that rewrote the URL in the HTML file. That may happen due to inconsistent image compression settings between two servers in a multi-server setup, or between the images vhost and the html vhost.The webp files are stored in some cache, by default the file cache. But if you configure pagespeed to use memcached then they won't show up in the file system. Is that the case for you?The default in-memory cache configuration changed in 1.7. Prior to 1.7 there was only an in-memory L1 cache if you configured it, and starting in 1.7 there is a shared memory cache configured by default.I don't think mod_pagespeed is a replacement for modules whose goal is to cache HTML files, usually to reduce the amount of PHP being called. The two solutions are complementary.-Josh
On Sun, Mar 30, 2014 at 12:14 AM, Hernán Marsili <hmar...@tfsla.com> wrote:
Hi,I'm experimenting with MOD_PAGESPEED at get it to work pretty straight forward. I have a couple of questions:1) I enable jpg to webp conversion and works perfectly. I was unable to change the expiration though. It always set in 5 minutes. I tried overriding with vhost directives (added the mime type and the add type expiration) but no luck.2) the module was clearly working (URL changed, serving webp files, etc), however, the /var/cache/pagespeed directory was completely EMPTY. Where are the webp files generated? in memory?
3) the basic standard cache, I as I read on the documents is disk based. The memory cache is RAM DISK based or there is in-memory cache?4) most importantly, and depending on question 3, is this a replacement for MOD_MEM_CACHE?RegardsHernán
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Hi!I'm using the latest version. I installed it following this: https://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/module/download?hl=de
I'm using the default config, so I was assuming the FILE CACHE was enabled. This is the config file I'm using: http://pastebin.com/PN58uJAX
Regarding pagespeed to be a replacement for MOD_MEM_CACHED or MOD_DISK_CACHE, if you use those primarily for STATIC CONTENT such as images, I don't see much difference based on what I wrote. Actually, the in-memory cache for pagespeed seems pretty similar to mod_mem_cache.
X-Mod-Pagespeed | 1.7.30.4-3847 |
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