# Config file for the Apache httpd. # Configuration.tmpl is the template for Configuration. Configuration should # be edited to select the modules to be included as well as various flags # for Makefile. # The template should only be changed when a new system or module is added, # or an existing one modified. This will also most likely require some minor # changes to Configure to recognize those changes. # There are 5 types of lines here: # '#' comments, distinguished by having a '#' as the first non-blank character # # Makefile options, such as CC=gcc, etc... # # Rules, distinguished by having "Rule" at the front. These are used to # control Configure's behavior as far as how to create Makefile. # # Module selection lines, distinguished by having 'AddModule' at the front. # These list the configured modules, in priority order (highest priority # last). They're down at the bottom. # # Optional module selection lines, distinguished by having `%Module' # at the front. These specify a module that is to be compiled in (but # not enabled). The AddModule directive can be used to enable such a # module. By default no such modules are defined. ################################################################ # Makefile configuration # # These are added to the general flags determined by Configure. # Edit these to work around Configure if needed. The EXTRA_* family # will be added to the regular Makefile flags. For example, if you # want to compile with -Wall, then add that to EXTRA_CFLAGS. These # will be added to whatever flags Configure determines as appropriate # and needed for your platform. # # You can also set the compiler (CC) and optimization (OPTIM) used here as # well. Settings here have priority; If not set, Configure will attempt to # guess the C compiler, looking for gcc first, then cc. # # Optimization note: # Be careful when adding optimization flags (like -O3 or -O6) on the OPTIM # entry, especially when using some GCC variants. Experience showed that using # these for compiling Apache is risky. If you don't want to see Apache dumping # core regularly then at most use -O or -O2. # EXTRA_CFLAGS= EXTRA_LDFLAGS= EXTRA_LIBS= EXTRA_INCLUDES= #CC= #OPTIM= #RANLIB= ################################################################ # Dynamic Shared Object (DSO) support # # There is experimental support for compiling the Apache core and # the Apache modules into dynamic shared object (DSO) files for # maximum runtime flexibility. # # The Configure script currently has only limited built-in # knowledge on how to compile these DSO files because this is # heavily platform-dependent. The current state of supported and # explicitly unsupported platforms can be found in the file # "htdocs/manual/sharedobjects.html", under # "Supported Platforms". # # For other platforms where you want to use the DSO mechanism you # first have to make sure it supports the pragmatic dlopen() # system call and then you have to provide the appropriate # compiler and linker flags below to create the DSO files on your # particular platform. # # The placement of the Apache core into a DSO file is triggered # by the SHARED_CORE rule below while support for building # individual Apache Modules as DSO files and loading them under # runtime without recompilation is triggered by `SharedModule' # commands. To be able to use the latter one first enable the # module mod_so (see corresponding `AddModule' command below). # Then enable the DSO feature for particular modules individually # by replacing their `AddModule' command with `SharedModule' and # change the filename extension from `.o' to `.so'. #CFLAGS_SHLIB= #LD_SHLIB= #LDFLAGS_SHLIB= #LDFLAGS_SHLIB_EXPORT= Rule SHARED_CORE=default ################################################################ # Rules configuration # # These are used to let Configure know that we want certain # functions. The format is: Rule RULE=value # # At present, only the following RULES are known: WANTHSREGEX, SOCKS4, # SOCKS5, STATUS, IRIXNIS, IRIXN32 and PARANOID. # # For all Rules, if set to "yes", then Configure knows we want that # capability and does what is required to add it in. If set to "default" # then Configure makes a "best guess"; if set to anything else, or not # present, then nothing is done. # # SOCKS4: # If SOCKS4 is set to 'yes', be sure that you add the socks library # location to EXTRA_LIBS, otherwise Configure will assume # "-L/usr/local/lib -lsocks" # # SOCKS5: # If SOCKS5 is set to 'yes', be sure that you add the socks5 library # location to EXTRA_LIBS, otherwise Configure will assume # "-L/usr/local/lib -lsocks5" # # STATUS: # If Configure determines that you are using the status_module, # it will automatically enable full status information if set # to 'yes'. If the status module is not included, having STATUS # set to 'yes' has no impact. # # IRIXNIS: # Only takes effect if Configure determines that you are running # SGI IRIX. If you are using a (ancient) 4.x version of IRIX, you # need this if you are using NIS and Apache needs access to it for # things like mod_userdir. This is not required on 5.x and later # and you should not enable it on such systems. # # IRIXN32: # If you are running a version of IRIX and Configure detects # n32 libraries, it will use those instead of the o32 ones. # # PARANOID: # New with version 1.3, during Configure modules can run # pre-programmed shell commands in the same environment that # Configure runs in. This allows modules to control how Configure # works. Normally, Configure will simply note that a module # is performing this function. If PARANOID is set to yes, it will # actually print-out the code that the modules execute # Rule STATUS=yes Rule SOCKS4=no Rule SOCKS5=no Rule IRIXNIS=no Rule IRIXN32=yes Rule PARANOID=no # The following rules should be set automatically by Configure. However, if # they are not set by Configure (because we don't know the correct value for # your platform), or are set incorrectly, you may override them here. # If you have to do this, please let us know what you set and what your # platform is, by filling out a problem report form at the Apache web site: # . If your browser is forms-incapable, you # can get the information to us by sending mail to apache-bugs@apache.org. # # WANTHSREGEX: # Apache requires a POSIX regex implementation. Henry Spencer's # excellent regex package is included with Apache and can be used # if desired. If your OS has a decent regex, you can elect to # not use this one by setting WANTHSREGEX to 'no' or commenting # out the Rule. The "default" action is "yes" unless overruled # by OS specifics Rule WANTHSREGEX=default ################################################################ # Module configuration # # Modules are listed in reverse priority order --- the ones that come # later can override the behavior of those that come earlier. This # can have visible effects; for instance, if UserDir followed Alias, # you couldn't alias out a particular user's home directory. # The configuration below is what we consider a decent default # configuration. If you want the functionality provided by a particular # module, remove the "#" sign at the beginning of the line. But remember, # the more modules you compile into the server, the larger the executable # is and the more memory it will take, so if you are unlikely to use the # functionality of a particular module you might wish to leave it out. ## ## Config manipulation modules ## ## mod_env sets up additional or restricted environment variables to be ## passed to CGI/SSI scripts. It is listed first (lowest priority) since ## it does not do per-request stuff. AddModule modules/standard/mod_env.o ## ## Request logging modules ## AddModule modules/standard/mod_log_config.o ## Optional modules for NCSA user-agent/referer logging compatibility ## We recommend, however, that you just use the configurable access_log. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_log_agent.o # AddModule modules/standard/mod_log_referer.o ## ## Type checking modules ## ## mod_mime_magic determines the type of a file by examining a few bytes ## of it and testing against a database of filetype signatures. It is ## based on the unix file(1) command. ## mod_mime maps filename extensions to content types, encodings, and ## "magic" type handlers (the latter is obsoleted by mod_actions, and ## don't confuse it with the previous module). ## mod_gzip_content is a specialized type of negotiation to return ## content-encoded: gzip versions of requested files if they ## exist based on the accept-encoding header and a CompressContent ## command in access.conf. ## mod_negotiation allows content selection based on the Accept* headers. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_mime_magic.o AddModule modules/standard/mod_mime.o AddModule modules/do_gzip/mod_gzip_content.o AddModule modules/standard/mod_negotiation.o ## ## Compressed content modules ## ## mod_gzip_content looks to see if the returned file ## also exists as content-encoded gzip, and if so ## returns that instead (setting the content-encoded header) ## ## Content delivery modules ## ## The status module allows the server to display current details about ## how well it is performing and what it is doing. Consider also enabling ## STATUS=yes (see the Rules section near the start of this file) to allow ## full status information. Check conf/access.conf on how to enable this. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_status.o ## The Info module displays configuration information for the server and ## all included modules. It's very useful for debugging. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_info.o ## mod_include translates server-side include (SSI) statements in text files. ## mod_autoindex handles requests for directories which have no index file ## mod_dir handles requests on directories and directory index files. ## mod_cgi handles CGI scripts. AddModule modules/standard/mod_include.o AddModule modules/standard/mod_autoindex.o AddModule modules/standard/mod_dir.o AddModule modules/standard/mod_cgi.o ## The asis module implements ".asis" file types, which allow the embedding ## of HTTP headers at the beginning of the document. mod_imap handles internal ## imagemaps (no more cgi-bin/imagemap/!). mod_actions is used to specify ## CGI scripts which act as "handlers" for particular files, for example to ## automatically convert every GIF to another file type. AddModule modules/standard/mod_asis.o AddModule modules/standard/mod_imap.o AddModule modules/standard/mod_actions.o ## ## URL translation modules. ## ## The Speling module attempts to correct misspellings of URLs that ## users might have entered, namely by checking capitalizations ## or by allowing up to one misspelling (character insertion / omission / ## transposition/typo). This catches the majority of misspelled requests. ## If it finds a match, a "spelling corrected" redirection is returned. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_speling.o ## The UserDir module for selecting resource directories by user name ## and a common prefix, e.g., /~ , /usr/web/ , etc. AddModule modules/standard/mod_userdir.o ## The proxy module enables the server to act as a proxy for outside ## http and ftp services. It's not as complete as it could be yet. ## NOTE: You do not want this module UNLESS you are running a proxy; ## it is not needed for normal (origin server) operation. # AddModule modules/proxy/libproxy.a ## The Alias module provides simple URL translation and redirection. AddModule modules/standard/mod_alias.o ## The URL rewriting module allows for powerful URI-to-URI and ## URI-to-filename mapping using a regular expression based ## rule-controlled rewriting engine. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_rewrite.o ## ## Access control and authentication modules. ## AddModule modules/standard/mod_access.o AddModule modules/standard/mod_auth.o ## The anon_auth module allows for anonymous-FTP-style username/ ## password authentication. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_auth_anon.o ## db_auth and dbm_auth work with Berkeley DB files - make sure there ## is support for DBM files on your system. You may need to grab the GNU ## "gdbm" package if not and possibly adjust EXTRA_LIBS. (This may be ## done by Configure at a later date) # AddModule modules/standard/mod_auth_dbm.o # AddModule modules/standard/mod_auth_db.o ## "digest" implements HTTP Digest Authentication rather than the less ## secure Basic Auth used by the other modules. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_digest.o ## Optional response header manipulation modules. ## ## cern_meta mimics the behavior of the CERN web server with regards to ## metainformation files. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_cern_meta.o ## The expires module can apply Expires: headers to resources, ## as a function of access time or modification time. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_expires.o ## The headers module can set arbitrary HTTP response headers, ## as configured in server, vhost, access.conf or .htaccess configs # AddModule modules/standard/mod_headers.o ## Miscellaneous modules ## ## mod_usertrack is the new name for mod_cookies. This module ## uses Netscape cookies to automatically construct and log ## click-trails from Netscape cookies, or compatible clients who ## aren't coming in via proxy. ## ## You do not need this, or any other module to allow your site ## to use Cookies. This module is for user tracking only # AddModule modules/standard/mod_usertrack.o ## The example module, which demonstrates the use of the API. See ## the file modules/example/README for details. This module should ## only be used for testing -- DO NOT ENABLE IT on a production server. # AddModule modules/example/mod_example.o ## mod_unique_id generates unique identifiers for each hit, which are ## available in the environment variable UNIQUE_ID. It may not work on all ## systems, hence it is not included by default. # AddModule modules/standard/mod_unique_id.o ## mod_so lets you add modules to Apache without recompiling. ## This is an experimental feature at this stage and only supported ## on a subset of the platforms we generally support. ## Don't change this entry to a 'SharedModule' variant (Bootstrapping!) # AddModule modules/standard/mod_so.o ## mod_mmap_static is an experimental module, you almost certainly ## don't need it. It can make some webservers faster. No further ## documentation is provided here because you'd be foolish ## to use mod_mmap_static without reading the full documentation. # AddModule modules/experimental/mod_mmap_static.o ## mod_setenvif lets you set environment variables based on the HTTP header ## fields in the request; this is useful for conditional HTML, for example. ## Since it is also used to detect buggy browsers for workarounds, it ## should be the last (highest priority) module. AddModule modules/standard/mod_setenvif.o