The AddEncoding directive maps the given filename extensions to the specified encoding type. MIME-enc is the MIME encoding to use for documents containing the extension. This mapping is added to any already in force, overriding any mappings that already exist for the same extension. Example:
AddEncoding x-gzip gz
AddEncoding x-compress Z
This will cause filenames containing the .gz extension to be marked
as encoded using the x-gzip encoding, and filenames containing the
.Z extension to be marked as encoded with x-compress.
Old clients expect x-gzip and
x-compress, however the standard dictates that they're
equivalent to gzip and compress
respectively. Apache does content encoding comparisons by ignoring
any leading x-. When responding with an encoding
Apache will use whatever form (i.e., x-foo or
foo) the client requested. If the client didn't
specifically request a particular form Apache will use the form
given by the AddEncoding directive. To make this long
story short, you should always use x-gzip and
x-compress for these two specific encodings. More recent
encodings, such as deflate should be specified without
the x-.
See also: Files with multiple extensions