This module allows user-specific directories to be accessed using the http://example.com/~user/ syntax.
The UserDir directive sets the real directory in a user’s home directory to use when a request for a document for a user is received.
This module allows user-specific directories to be accessed using the http://example.com/~user/ syntax.
The UserDir directive sets the real directory in a user’s home directory to use when a request for a document for a user is received.
If the end user terminates the connection when the server response was being formed or was being transferred, we see “connection reset by peer” in the error log.
Virtual hosting is a method for hosting multiple domain names (with separate handling of each name) on a single server (or pool of servers). This allows one server to share its resources, such as memory and processor cycles, without requiring all services provided to use the same host name.
This directive enables or disables the spelling module. When enabled, keep in mind that
mod_speling should not be enabled in DAV enabled directories, because it will try to “spell fix” newly created resource names against existing filenames, e.g., when trying to upload a new document doc43.html it might redirect to an existing document doc34.html, which is not what was intended.
This directive is equivalent to Alias, but makes use of regular expressions, instead of simple prefix matching. The supplied regular expression is matched against the URL-path, and if it matches, the server will substitute any parenthesized matches into the given string and use it as a filename. For example, to activate the /icons directory, one might use:
AliasMatch ^/icons(.*) /usr/local/apache/icons$1
The Alias directive allows documents to be stored in the local filesystem other than under the DocumentRoot. URLs with a (%-decoded) path beginning with URL-path will be mapped to local files beginning with directory-path. The URL-path is case-sensitive, even on case-insensitive file systems.
Example:
Alias /image /ftp/pub/image
It can be done with the help of Name Based Virtual hosting.
ServerName 127.0.0.1
NameVirtualHost *:80
ServerName web1.test.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/web1
ServerName web2.test2.com
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/web2
Loglevel debug will give you more information in the error log in order to debug a problem.
mod_perl scripting module to allow better Perl script performance and easy integration with the web server.
During a normal restart, the server is stopped and then started, causing some requests to be lost. A graceful restart allows Apache children to continue to serve their current requests until they can be replaced with children running the new configuration.