commit | 6e516afba3acbeddfd7114956f0601e8fa2271c4 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Otto van der Schaaf <oschaaf@apache.org> | Tue Aug 30 23:28:09 2022 +0200 |
committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | Tue Aug 30 23:28:09 2022 +0200 |
tree | 91df357dff397cbddf2205c59c13228459d75853 | |
parent | 39faa2a203d02f61fd6cc7a4a1e2212ecfb26453 [diff] |
Travis: use bazelisk (#2100) Instead of hard coding bazel versions, use bazelisk which will use .bazelversion. That has the canonical version that we use.
CI | Status |
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Travis |
mod_pagespeed
is an open-source Apache module created by Google to help Make the Web Faster by rewriting web pages to reduce latency and bandwidth.
mod_pagespeed releases are available as precompiled linux packages or as source. (See Release Notes for information about bugs fixed)
mod_pagespeed is an open-source Apache module which automatically applies web performance best practices to pages, and associated assets (CSS, JavaScript, images) without requiring that you modify your existing content or workflow.
mod_pagespeed is built on PageSpeed Optimization Libraries, deployed across 100,000+ web-sites, and provided by popular hosting and CDN providers such as DreamHost, GoDaddy, EdgeCast, and others. There are 40+ available optimizations filters, which include:
Curious to learn more about mod_pagespeed? Check out our GDL episode below, which covers the history of the project, an architectural overview of how mod_pagespeed works under the hood, and a number of operational tips and best practices for deploying mod_pagespeed.