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+<!-- $LastChangedRevision$ -->
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- Copyright 2002-2004 The Apache Software Foundation
-
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<title>Configuration Files</title>
<summary>
-<p>This document describes the files used to configure the Apache
-HTTP server.</p>
+<p>This document describes the files used to configure Apache HTTP
+Server.</p>
</summary>
<section id="main">
</directivelist>
</related>
- <p>Apache is configured by placing <a
+ <p>Apache HTTP Server is configured by placing <a
href="mod/directives.html">directives</a> in plain text
configuration files. The main configuration file is usually called
<code>httpd.conf</code>. The location of this file is set at
added using the <directive module="core">Include</directive>
directive, and wildcards can be used to include many configuration
files. Any directive may be placed in any of these configuration
- files. Changes to the main configuration files are only
- recognized by Apache when it is started or restarted.</p>
+ files. Changes to the main configuration files are only
+ recognized by httpd when it is started or restarted.</p>
<p>The server also reads a file containing mime document types;
the filename is set by the <directive
<section id="syntax">
<title>Syntax of the Configuration Files</title>
- <p>Apache configuration files contain one directive per line.
- The back-slash "\" may be used as the last character on a line
+ <p>httpd configuration files contain one directive per line.
+ The backslash "\" may be used as the last character on a line
to indicate that the directive continues onto the next line.
There must be no other characters or white space between the
- back-slash and the end of the line.</p>
+ backslash and the end of the line.</p>
+
+ <p>Arguments to directives are separated by whitespace. If an
+ argument contains spaces, you must enclose that argument in quotes.</p>
<p>Directives in the configuration files are case-insensitive,
but arguments to directives are often case sensitive. Lines
that begin with the hash character "#" are considered
comments, and are ignored. Comments may <strong>not</strong> be
- included on a line after a configuration directive. Blank lines
- and white space occurring before a directive are ignored, so
- you may indent directives for clarity.</p>
+ included on the same line as a configuration directive.
+ White space occurring before a directive is ignored, so
+ you may indent directives for clarity. Blank lines are also ignored.</p>
+
+ <p>The values of variables defined with the <directive
+ module="core">Define</directive> of or shell environment variables can
+ be used in configuration file lines using the syntax <code>${VAR}</code>.
+ If "VAR" is the name of a valid variable, the value of that variable is
+ substituted into that spot in the configuration file line, and processing
+ continues as if that text were found directly in the configuration file.
+ Variables defined with <directive module="core">Define</directive> take
+ precedence over shell environment variables.
+ If the "VAR" variable is not found, the characters <code>${VAR}</code>
+ are left unchanged, and a warning is logged.
+ Variable names may not contain colon ":" characters, to avoid clashes with
+ <directive module="mod_rewrite">RewriteMap</directive>'s syntax.</p>
+
+ <p>Only shell environment variables defined before the server is started
+ can be used in expansions. Environment variables defined in the
+ configuration file itself, for example with <directive
+ module="mod_env">SetEnv</directive>, take effect too late to be used for
+ expansions in the configuration file.</p>
+
+ <p>The maximum length of a line in normal configuration files, after
+ variable substitution and joining any continued lines, is approximately
+ 16 MiB. In <a href="configuring.html#htaccess">.htaccess files</a>, the
+ maximum length is 8190 characters.</p>
<p>You can check your configuration files for syntax errors
without starting the server by using <code>apachectl
configtest</code> or the <code>-t</code> command line
option.</p>
+
+ <p>You can use <module>mod_info</module>'s <code>-DDUMP_CONFIG</code> to
+ dump the configuration with all included files and environment
+ variables resolved and all comments and non-matching
+ <directive module="core" type="section">IfDefine</directive> and
+ <directive module="core" type="section">IfModule</directive> sections
+ removed. However, the output does not reflect the merging or overriding
+ that may happen for repeated directives.</p>
</section>
<section id="modules">
</directivelist>
</related>
- <p>Apache is a modular server. This implies that only the most
+ <p>httpd is a modular server. This implies that only the most
basic functionality is included in the core server. Extended
features are available through <a
href="mod/">modules</a> which can be loaded
- into Apache. By default, a <a
+ into httpd. By default, a <a
href="mod/module-dict.html#Status">base</a> set of modules is
included in the server at compile-time. If the server is
compiled to use <a href="dso.html">dynamically loaded</a>
modules, then modules can be compiled separately and added at
any time using the <directive module="mod_so">LoadModule</directive>
directive.
- Otherwise, Apache must be recompiled to add or remove modules.
+ Otherwise, httpd must be recompiled to add or remove modules.
Configuration directives may be included conditional on a
- presence of a particular module by enclosing them in an<directive
- module="core" type="section">IfModule</directive> block.</p>
+ presence of a particular module by enclosing them in an <directive
+ module="core" type="section">IfModule</directive> block. However,
+ <directive type="section">IfModule</directive> blocks are not
+ required, and in some cases may mask the fact that you're missing an
+ important module.</p>
<p>To see which modules are currently compiled into the server,
- you can use the <code>-l</code> command line option.</p>
+ you can use the <code>-l</code> command line option. You can also
+ see what modules are loaded dynamically using the <code>-M</code>
+ command line option.</p>
</section>
<section id="scope">
locations or URLs. They can also be nested, allowing for very
fine grained configuration.</p>
- <p>Apache has the capability to serve many different websites
+ <p>httpd has the capability to serve many different websites
simultaneously. This is called <a href="vhosts/">Virtual
Hosting</a>. Directives can also be scoped by placing them
inside <directive module="core" type="section">VirtualHost</directive>
</directivelist>
</related>
- <p>Apache allows for decentralized management of configuration
+ <p>httpd allows for decentralized management of configuration
via special files placed inside the web tree. The special files
are usually called <code>.htaccess</code>, but any name can be
specified in the <directive module="core">AccessFileName</directive>