W3C httpd manual

Configuration File of W3C httpd

The configuration file (often referred to as the rule file) defines how httpd will translate a request into a document name. The directives controlling httpd features are also put into the configuration file, as well as protection configuration. This is essential to prevent unauthorized access to your private documents.

Unlike some other HTTP servers, W3C httpd requires only a single configuration file (but it can have many).

Default Configuration File

By default, the configuration file /etc/httpd.conf is loaded, unless specified otherwise with the -r command line option:

        httpd -p 80 -r /your/own/httpd.conf

See also example configuration files.

Comments in Configuration File

Each line consists of an operation code and one or two parameters, referred to as the template and the result. Lines starting with a hash sign # are ignored, as are empty lines.


Restarting the Server

When you are running the server in standalone mode (not from inetd), and modify the configuration file, send the HUP signal to httpd to make it re-read the configuration file. You can find out the process number from the pid file written by httpd, e.g.

        > cat /server_root/httpd-pid
        2846
        > kill -HUP 2846
        >

Important: You must specify the configuration file as an absolute pathname for the -r option because when the server is started in standalone mode it changes its current directory to / so after startup it cannot reload configuration files that were specified with relative filenames.

To make restarting easier httpd has a -restart option, which will automatically send the HUP signal to another httpd process. Important: To find out the PidFile httpd will have to read the same configuration file as the running httpd has, so you have to specify the same -r options on the command line as for the actual httpd, e.g.

        > httpd -r /usr/etc/httpd.conf -restart
        Restarting.. httpd
        Sending..... HUP signal to process 21379
        >


Exhaustive List of Configuration Directives


Henrik Frystyk Nielsen, [email protected],

@(#) $Id: Overview.html,v 1.6 1996/08/05 21:12:45 frystyk Exp $