Combine JavaScript
JavaScriptCombines multiple script files into one to cut HTTP requests.
Filter
combine_javascript
· Filter docs
A mod_pagespeed 1.15 filter. ModPageSpeed 2.0 applies it as part of one always-on pipeline, not as a separate switch.
Both frames render identically — that's the goal. The win is in the bytes and requests
below, not the look. They're served live by mod_pagespeed 1.15 on
demo-httpd-1.1.modpagespeed.com; the optimized frame
applies only this filter. Right after a cache purge it may briefly match the original while
the worker rewrites it — reload to see the result.
Measured impact
HTTP requests
What changed in the source
The page's HTML, before and after this filter. Red lines are removed, green lines are added.
<html>
<head>
<title>combine_javascript example</title>
- <script src="combine_javascript1.js"></script>
- <script src="combine_javascript2.js"></script>
+ <script src="combine_javascript1.js+combine_javascript2.js.pagespeed.jc.MpXqs3oJAj.js"></script><script>eval(mod_pagespeed_W$_HTBjQGq);</script>
+ <script>eval(mod_pagespeed_pfGXQX1gU1);</script>
</head>
<body>
Hello, PageSpeed!
Run this on your own site
This is one of 47 filters mod_pagespeed 1.15 applies in place — self-hosted on
Apache, nginx, and IIS. Install and run it: it optimizes right away and adds an
X-PageSpeed-Warn: unlicensed header until you license it. A
commercial license is required for production use.