| commit | f2fb4cf695f3eb74f570d4ab73ed9d3c34d1cb5d | [log] [tgz] |
|---|---|---|
| author | Otto van der Schaaf <oschaaf@we-amp.com> | Tue Oct 11 09:28:05 2022 +0200 |
| committer | Otto van der Schaaf <oschaaf@we-amp.com> | Tue Oct 11 10:31:04 2022 +0200 |
| tree | b08571789593346dc730497f5fb081a71f2d149b | |
| parent | 964cba841718fb0cf79ac5b577457aed26af24f5 [diff] |
Update to Envoy ff49762696b2e6ed3f408a22e1f7a1b7d2487318 (Oct 11th) - Note: needed to define ABSL_LEGACY_THREAD_ANNOTATIONS. Looks like some of absl's annotations have been renamed - fmt started complaining about StringPiece as an input. Needed to tweak logging and introduce some tech debt to strip newlines at the end of the log line without adding memory copying

| CI | Status |
|---|---|
| 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.