# Config file for the Apache httpd. # Configuration.tmpl is the template for Configuration. Configuration should # be edited to select system type. Configuration.tmpl should only be changed # when a new system or module is added, or an existing one modified. # There are three types of lines here: # '#' comments, distinguished by having a '#' as the first non-blank character # # Lines which set a Make option --- these are simply copied into the Makefile # # Module selection lines, distinguished by having 'Module' at the front. # These list the configured modules, in priority order (highest priority # first). They're down at the bottom. # First, ordinary compile-time configuration. # What to call the compiler: For normal machines with ANSI compilers # CC= cc # For Suns or other non-ANSI platforms. Please make sure your gcc is # 2.0 or later, as 1.40 seems to create bad code for the Sun 4. CC= gcc # CFLAGS, compile flags. # -DMINIMAL_DNS is now obsolete. Use httpd.conf settings of # HostnameLookups on # or # HostnameLookups off # # If you want to have more secure hostname resolution at the cost of some # performance, use -DMAXIMUM_DNS. # If you want setting the xbit of a file to cause it to be treated as # server-included HTML (unless it is a CGI script), say -DXBITHACK. Note # that this is a run-time option, per-directory, either way (via the XBITHACK # command); this option only sets the default. # If you find that your OS can't cope with mmap (compiles OKAY but refuses # to run and moans "httpd: Could not mmap memory" .. or similar) try # disabling use of shared memory for process management (scoreboard with # -DNO_MMAP # Status Instrumentation # In order for the status module to obtain full statistics Apache must # be modified to keep track of various information. This is not # turned on by default. In order to enable full status details add -DSTATUS # to the end of the CFLAGS line below. # Using SOCKS # Apache can be compiled to work over a SOCKS firewall by # adding the following string to your CFLAGS define: # # -Dconnect=Rconnect -Dselect=Rselect -Dgethstbyname=Rgethostbyname # # and by adding the following to the EXTRA_LIBS define: # # -L/usr/local/lib -lsocks # # making sure that -L points to wherever you've put libsocks.a. # [Some other former Apache compile-time options are now treated differently; # the virtual host code is always present; DBM auth is an optional module, and # may be configured out by changing the module config below, though it still # defaults in. Note that this config file does not include DBM auth by # default --- configure it in below if you need it]. CFLAGS= -O2 # Place here any flags you may need upon linking, such as a flag to # prevent dynamic linking (if desired) LFLAGS= # Place here any extra libraries you may need to link to. # -lndbm is commonly required for DBM auth, if that is configured in. EXTRA_LIBS= # AUX_CFLAGS are system-specific control flags. # NOTE: IF YOU DO NOT CHOOSE ONE OF THESE, EDIT httpd.h AND CHOOSE # SETTINGS FOR THE SYSTEM FLAGS. IF YOU DON'T, BAD THINGS WILL HAPPEN. # For SunOS 4 #AUX_CFLAGS= -DSUNOS4 # For Solaris 2. #AUX_CFLAGS= -DSOLARIS2 #AUX_LIBS= -lsocket -lnsl # For SGI IRIX. Use the AUX_LIBS line if you're using NIS and want # user-supported directories #AUX_CFLAGS= -DIRIX #AUX_LIBS= -lsun # For HP-UX n.b. if you use the paid-for HP CC compiler, use flag -Ae #AUX_CFLAGS= -DHPUX # For AIX #AUX_CFLAGS= -DAIX -U__STR__ # For Ultrix #AUX_CFLAGS= -DULTRIX # For DEC OSF/1 #AUX_CFLAGS= -DOSF1 # For NeXT #AUX_CFLAGS= -DNEXT # For Sequent #AUX_CFLAGS= -DSEQUENT # For Linux -m486 ONLY IF YOU HAVE 486 BINARY SUPPORT IN KERNEL #AUX_CFLAGS= -DLINUX # For A/UX #AUX_CFLAGS= -DAUX -D_POSIX_SOURCE #AUX_LIBS= -lposix -lbsd -s # For SCO ODT 3 # libcrypt_i available from sosco.sco.com, files /SLS/lng225b.Z and # /SLS/lng225b.ltr.Z # the -Oe option causes cc to die compiling mod_imap (using 3.0.0a of the dev sys) #CFLAGS= -Oacgiltz #AUX_CFLAGS= -DSCO #AUX_LIBS= -lPW -lsocket -lmalloc -lcrypt_i # For SCO OpenServer Release 5 # -K noinline is needed to work around an optimiser bug which appears in # http_bprintf.c #AUX_CFLAGS= -DSCO5 #AUX_LIBS=-lsocket -lmalloc -lprot #BROKEN_BPRINTF_FLAGS=-K noinline # For SVR4 # Some SVR4 implementations will require SO_LINGER option to be set in order # to guarantee buffer flushes. Dell, Esix, and UnixWare are a few of these. # Use -DNEED_LINGER in addition to other AUX_CFLAGS for these. #AUX_CFLAGS= -DSVR4 #AUX_LIBS= -lsocket -lnsl -lc # For UnixWare 2.x, no longer just SVR4 (sigh) - use cc, not gcc # AUX_LIBS= -lsocket -lnsl -lcrypt # For Amdahl UTS 2.1 # -Xa enables ANSI mode, -eft is expanded types #AUX_CFLAGS= -Xa -eft -DUTS21 #AUX_LIBS= -lsocket -lbsd -la # For HP/Apollo Domain/OS #AUX_CFLAGS= -DAPOLLO # For NetBSD/FreeBSD/BSDI 2.x # -m486 only if you are running on Intel 486/586 #AUX_CFLAGS= -m486 # BSDI doesn't need -lcrypt #AUX_LIBS= -lcrypt # For QNX #AUX_CFLAGS= -DQNX #AUX_LFLAGS= -N 0x20000 # For LynxOS #AUX_CFLAGS= -DLYNXOS #EXTRA_LIBS=-lbsd -ldes -lc_p # For DG/UX 5.4 #AUX_CFLAGS= -DDGUX #AUX_LIBS= # For EMX OS/2 port #AUX_CFLAGS= -Zbsd-signals -Zbin-files #-DNO_KILLPG -DNEED_STRCASECMP -DNO_SETSID #-g #AUX_LIBS= -lsocket -llibufc -lgdbm -lbsd ################################################################ # 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. ## Basic modules (i.e., generally useful stuff that works everyplace): ## You should probably not comment out any of these unless you know what it ## does and you know you won't need it. Module mime_module mod_mime.o Module access_module mod_access.o Module auth_module mod_auth.o Module negotiation_module mod_negotiation.o Module includes_module mod_include.o Module dir_module mod_dir.o Module cgi_module mod_cgi.o Module userdir_module mod_userdir.o Module alias_module mod_alias.o Module common_log_module mod_log_common.o ## The asis module implemented ".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. Module asis_module mod_asis.o Module imap_module mod_imap.o Module action_module mod_actions.o ## Optional modules for NCSA user-agent/referer logging compatibility ## We recommend, however, that you migrate to the configurable logging ## module, below. # Module agent_log_module mod_log_agent.o # Module referer_log_module mod_log_referer.o ## This is a *replacement* for mod_log_common which supports a ## LogFormat directive which allows you to specify what goes into ## the TransferLog (if you want Referer, etc.) source code for docs. ## ## If you play with this, remember to drop the standard ## mod_log_common --- a server with both will work, but you'll get ## very confused trying to figure out what's going on... # Module config_log_module mod_log_config.o ## cern_meta mimicks the behavior of the CERN web server with regards to ## metainformation files. mod_env allows the setting of extra CGI environment ## variables. The anon_auth module allows for anonymous-FTP-style username/ ## password authentication. # Module cern_meta_module mod_cern_meta.o # Module env_module mod_env.o # Module anon_auth_module mod_auth_anon.o ## The status module allows the server to display current details about ## how well it is performing and what it is doing. Consider also enabling ## -DSTATUS (see the CFLAGS section near the start of the file) to allow ## full status information. Check conf/access.conf on how to enable this. # Module status_module mod_status.o ## The Info module displays configuration information for the server and ## all included modules. It's very useful for debugging. # Module info_module mod_info.o ## Optional authentication modules, which should only be ## uncommented out if you have the neccessary system support. ## (if you don't have the decade-old "new" DBM libs, for example) ## db_auth works with Berkeley DB files, and msql_auth checks ## against an MSQL database. Finally, mod_digest implements HTTP ## Digest Authentication rather than the less secure Basic Auth ## used by the other modules. # Module dbm_auth_module mod_auth_dbm.o # Module db_auth_module mod_auth_db.o # Module msql_auth_module mod_auth_msql.o # Module digest_module mod_digest.o ## Outright experiments --- mod_dld defines commands which ## allows other modules to be loaded in at runtime, and mod_cookies ## uses Netscape cookies to automatically construct and log accurate ## click-trails from Netscape cookies, for Netscape-using clients who ## aren't coming in via proxy. # Module dld_module mod_dld.o # Module cookies_module mod_cookies.o ## Finally, the proxy module. It's not as complete as it could ## be yet, so use at your own risk. # Module proxy_module mod_proxy.o