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author | (no author) <(no author)@unknown> | 1999-06-18 18:39:23 +0000 |
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committer | (no author) <(no author)@unknown> | 1999-06-18 18:39:23 +0000 |
commit | 2e57a6c3328a34de4f04ada2c539c97f353f9601 (patch) | |
tree | c784b9abadc0779705e7041af746a84248841ee2 /docs/manual/mod/mod_mime.html | |
parent | db82a6637eb3e5e2afa9aca8a571c32187e072f4 (diff) | |
download | httpd-unlabeled-1.1.1.tar.gz |
This commit was manufactured by cvs2svn to create branchunlabeled-1.1.1
'unlabeled-1.1.1'.
git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpd/httpd/branches/unlabeled-1.1.1@83345 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/manual/mod/mod_mime.html')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/manual/mod/mod_mime.html | 538 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 538 deletions
diff --git a/docs/manual/mod/mod_mime.html b/docs/manual/mod/mod_mime.html deleted file mode 100644 index c222cab89b..0000000000 --- a/docs/manual/mod/mod_mime.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,538 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2 Final//EN"> -<HTML> -<HEAD> -<TITLE>Apache module mod_mime</TITLE> -</HEAD> - -<!-- Background white, links blue (unvisited), navy (visited), red (active) --> -<BODY - BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" - TEXT="#000000" - LINK="#0000FF" - VLINK="#000080" - ALINK="#FF0000" -> -<!--#include virtual="header.html" --> -<H1 ALIGN="CENTER">Module mod_mime</H1> - -This module is contained in the <CODE>mod_mime.c</CODE> file, and is -compiled in by default. It provides for determining the types of files -from the filename. - -<H2>Summary</H2> - -This module is used to determine various bits of "meta information" -about documents. This information relates to the content of the -document and is returned to the browser or used in content-negotiation -within the server. In addition, a "handler" can be set for a document, -which determines how the document will be processed within the server. - -<P> - -The directives <A HREF="#addencoding">AddEncoding</A>, <A -HREF="#addhandler">AddHandler</A>, <A -HREF="#addlanguage">AddLanguage</A> and <A HREF="#addtype">AddType</A> -are all used to map file extensions onto the meta-information for that -file. Respectively they set the content-encoding, handler, -content-language and MIME-type (content-type) of documents. The -directive <A HREF="#typesconfig">TypesConfig</A> is used to specify a -file which also maps extensions onto MIME types. The directives <A -HREF="#forcetype">ForceType</A> and <A -HREF="#sethandler">SetHandler</A> are used to associated all the files -in a given location (<EM>e.g.</EM>, a particular directory) onto a particular -MIME type or handler. - -<P> - -Note that changing the type or encoding of a file does not change the -value of the <CODE>Last-Modified</CODE> header. Thus, previously cached -copies may still be used by a client or proxy, with the previous headers. - -<H2><A NAME="multipleext">Files with Multiple Extensions</A></H2> - -Files can have more than one extension, and the order of the -extensions is <EM>normally</EM> irrelevant. For example, if the file -<CODE>welcome.html.fr</CODE> maps onto content type text/html and -language French then the file <CODE>welcome.fr.html</CODE> will map -onto exactly the same information. The only exception to this is if an -extension is given which Apache does not know how to handle. In this -case it will "forget" about any information it obtained from -extensions to the left of the unknown extension. So, for example, if -the extensions fr and html are mapped to the appropriate language and -type but extension xxx is not assigned to anything, then the file -<CODE>welcome.fr.xxx.html</CODE> will be associated with content-type -text/html but <EM>no</EM> language. - -<P> - -If more than one extension is given which maps onto the same type of -meta-information, then the one to the right will be used. For example, -if ".gif" maps to the MIME-type image/gif and ".html" maps to the -MIME-type text/html, then the file <CODE>welcome.gif.html</CODE> will -be associated with the MIME-type "text/html". - -<P> - -Care should be taken when a file with multiple extensions gets -associated with both a MIME-type and a handler. This will usually -result in the request being by the module associated with the -handler. For example, if the <CODE>.imap</CODE> extension is mapped to -the handler "imap-file" (from mod_imap) and the <CODE>.html</CODE> -extension is mapped to the MIME-type "text/html", then the file -<CODE>world.imap.html</CODE> will be associated with both the -"imap-file" handler and "text/html" MIME-type. When it is processed, -the "imap-file" handler will be used, and so it will be treated as a -mod_imap imagemap file. - -<H2>Directives</H2> -<UL> -<LI><A HREF="#addencoding">AddEncoding</A> -<LI><A HREF="#addhandler">AddHandler</A> -<LI><A HREF="#addlanguage">AddLanguage</A> -<LI><A HREF="#addtype">AddType</A> -<LI><A HREF="#defaultlanguage">DefaultLanguage</A> -<LI><A HREF="#forcetype">ForceType</A> -<LI><A HREF="#removehandler">RemoveHandler</A> -<LI><A HREF="#sethandler">SetHandler</A> -<LI><A HREF="#typesconfig">TypesConfig</A> -</UL> -<HR> - - -<H2><A NAME="addencoding">AddEncoding</A></H2> -<!--%plaintext <?INDEX {\tt AddEncoding} directive> --> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Syntax" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Syntax:</STRONG></A> AddEncoding <EM>MIME-enc extension extension...</EM><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Context" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Context:</STRONG></A> server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Override" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Override:</STRONG></A> FileInfo<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Status" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Status:</STRONG></A> Base<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Module" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Module:</STRONG></A> mod_mime<P> - -The AddEncoding directive maps the given filename extensions to the -specified encoding type. <EM>MIME-enc</EM> is the MIME encoding to use -for documents containing the <EM>extension</EM>. This mapping is added -to any already in force, overriding any mappings that already exist -for the same <EM>extension</EM>. - -Example: -<BLOCKQUOTE><CODE> AddEncoding x-gzip gz<BR> AddEncoding x-compress Z -</CODE></BLOCKQUOTE> - -This will cause filenames containing the .gz extension to be marked as -encoded using the x-gzip encoding, and filenames containing the .Z -extension to be marked as encoded with x-compress.<P> - -Old clients expect <CODE>x-gzip</CODE> and <CODE>x-compress</CODE>, -however the standard dictates that they're equivalent to <CODE>gzip</CODE> -and <CODE>compress</CODE> respectively. Apache does content encoding -comparisons by ignoring any leading <CODE>x-</CODE>. When responding -with an encoding Apache will use whatever form (<EM>i.e.</EM>, <CODE>x-foo</CODE> -or <CODE>foo</CODE>) the client requested. If the client didn't -specifically request a particular form Apache will use the form given by -the <CODE>AddEncoding</CODE> directive. To make this long story short, -you should always use <CODE>x-gzip</CODE> and <CODE>x-compress</CODE> -for these two specific encodings. More recent encodings, such as -<CODE>deflate</CODE> should be specified without the <CODE>x-</CODE>. - -<P> - -<STRONG>See also</STRONG>: <A HREF="#multipleext">Files with -multiple extensions</A> - -<P><HR> - -<H2><A NAME="addhandler">AddHandler</A></H2> - -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Syntax" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Syntax:</STRONG></A> AddHandler <EM>handler-name extension extension...</EM><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Context" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Context:</STRONG></A> server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Override" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Override:</STRONG></A> FileInfo<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Status" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Status:</STRONG></A> Base<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Module" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Module:</STRONG></A> mod_mime<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Compatibility" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Compatibility:</STRONG></A> AddHandler is only available in Apache -1.1 and later<P> - -<P>AddHandler maps the filename extensions <EM>extension</EM> to the -<A HREF="../handler.html">handler</A> <EM>handler-name</EM>. This -mapping is added to any already in force, overriding any mappings that -already exist for the same <EM>extension</EM>. - -For example, to activate CGI scripts -with the file extension "<CODE>.cgi</CODE>", you might use: -<PRE> - AddHandler cgi-script cgi -</PRE> - -<P>Once that has been put into your srm.conf or httpd.conf file, any -file containing the "<CODE>.cgi</CODE>" extension will be treated as a -CGI program.</P> - -<P> - -<STRONG>See also</STRONG>: <A HREF="#multipleext">Files with -multiple extensions</A> - -<HR> - -<H2><A NAME="addlanguage">AddLanguage</A></H2> -<!--%plaintext <?INDEX {\tt AddLanguage} directive> --> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Syntax" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Syntax:</STRONG></A> AddLanguage <EM>MIME-lang extension extension...</EM><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Context" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Context:</STRONG></A> server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Override" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Override:</STRONG></A> FileInfo<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Status" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Status:</STRONG></A> Base<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Module" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Module:</STRONG></A> mod_mime - -<P> -The AddLanguage directive maps the given filename extensions to the -specified content language. <EM>MIME-lang</EM> is the MIME language of -filenames containing <EM>extension</EM>. This mapping is added to any -already in force, overriding any mappings that already exist for the -same <EM>extension</EM>. -</P> -<P> -Example: <BLOCKQUOTE><CODE> -AddEncoding x-compress Z<BR> AddLanguage en .en<BR> AddLanguage fr -.fr<BR> </CODE></BLOCKQUOTE> -</P> -<P> -Then the document <CODE>xxxx.en.Z</CODE> will be treated as being a -compressed English document (as will the document -<CODE>xxxx.Z.en</CODE>). Although the content language is reported to -the client, the browser is unlikely to use this information. The -AddLanguage directive is more useful for -<A HREF="../content-negotiation.html">content negotiation</A>, where -the server returns one from several documents based on the client's -language preference. -</P> -<P> -If multiple language assignments are made for the same extension, -the last one encountered is the one that is used. That is, for the -case of: -</P> -<PRE> - AddLanguage en .en - AddLanguage en-uk .en - AddLanguage en-us .en -</PRE> -<P> -documents with the extension "<CODE>.en</CODE>" would be treated as -being "<CODE>en-us</CODE>". -</P> -<P> -<STRONG>See also</STRONG>: <A HREF="#multipleext">Files with -multiple extensions</A> -<BR> -<STRONG>See also</STRONG>: <A -HREF="./mod_negotiation.html">mod_negotiation</A> -</P> - -<HR> - -<H2><A NAME="addtype">AddType</A></H2> -<!--%plaintext <?INDEX {\tt AddType} directive> --> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Syntax" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Syntax:</STRONG></A> AddType <EM>MIME-type extension extension...</EM><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Context" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Context:</STRONG></A> server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Override" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Override:</STRONG></A> FileInfo<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Status" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Status:</STRONG></A> Base<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Module" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Module:</STRONG></A> mod_mime<P> - -The AddType directive maps the given filename extensions onto the -specified content type. <EM>MIME-enc</EM> is the MIME type to use for -filenames containing <EM>extension</EM>. This mapping is added to any -already in force, overriding any mappings that already exist for the -same <EM>extension</EM>. This directive can be used to add mappings -not listed in the MIME types file (see the <CODE><A -HREF="#typesconfig">TypesConfig</A></CODE> directive). - -Example: -<BLOCKQUOTE><CODE> -AddType image/gif GIF -</CODE></BLOCKQUOTE> -It is recommended that new MIME types be added using the AddType directive -rather than changing the <A HREF="#typesconfig">TypesConfig</A> file.<P> -Note that, unlike the NCSA httpd, this directive cannot be used to set the -type of particular files.<P> - -<P> - -<STRONG>See also</STRONG>: <A HREF="#multipleext">Files with -multiple extensions</A> - -<HR> - -<H2><A NAME="defaultlanguage">DefaultLanguage</A></H2> -<!--%plaintext <?INDEX {\tt DefaultLanguage} directive> --> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Syntax" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Syntax:</STRONG></A> DefaultLanguage <EM>MIME-lang</EM><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Context" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Context:</STRONG></A> server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Override" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Override:</STRONG></A> FileInfo<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Status" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Status:</STRONG></A> Base<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Module" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Module:</STRONG></A> mod_mime<P> - -The DefaultLanguage directive tells Apache that all files in the -directive's scope (<EM>e.g.</EM>, all files covered by the current -<CODE><Directory></CODE> container) that don't have an explicit -language extension (such as <SAMP>.fr</SAMP> or <SAMP>.de</SAMP> as -configured by <SAMP>AddLanguage</SAMP>) should be considered to be in -the specified <EM>MIME-lang</EM> language. This allows entire -directories to be marked as containing Dutch content, for instance, -without having to rename each file. Note that unlike using extensions -to specify languages, <SAMP>DefaultLanguage</SAMP> can only specify a -single language. - -<P> - -If no <SAMP>DefaultLanguage</SAMP> directive is in force, and a file -does not have any language extensions as configured by -<SAMP>AddLanguage</SAMP>, then that file will be considered to have no -language attribute. - -<P> - -<STRONG>See also</STRONG>: <A -HREF="./mod_negotiation.html">mod_negotiation</A> -<BR> -<STRONG>See also</STRONG>: <A HREF="#multipleext">Files with -multiple extensions</A> - -<HR> - -<H2><A NAME="forcetype">ForceType</A></H2> - -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Syntax" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Syntax:</STRONG></A> ForceType <EM>media type</EM><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Context" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Context:</STRONG></A> directory, .htaccess<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Status" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Status:</STRONG></A> Base<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Module" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Module:</STRONG></A> mod_mime<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Compatibility" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Compatibility:</STRONG></A> ForceType is only available in Apache -1.1 and later.<P> - -<P>When placed into an <CODE>.htaccess</CODE> file or a -<CODE><Directory></CODE> or <CODE><Location></CODE> section, -this directive forces all matching files to be served -as the content type given by <EM>media type</EM>. For example, if you -had a directory full of GIF files, but did not want to label them all with -".gif", you might want to use: -<PRE> - ForceType image/gif -</PRE> -<P>Note that this will override any filename extensions that might determine -the media type.</P><HR> - -<H2><A NAME="removehandler">RemoveHandler</A></H2> - -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Syntax" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Syntax:</STRONG></A> RemoveHandler <EM>extension extension...</EM><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Context" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Context:</STRONG></A> directory, .htaccess<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Status" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Status:</STRONG></A> Base<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Module" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Module:</STRONG></A> mod_mime<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Compatibility" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Compatibility:</STRONG></A> RemoveHandler is only available in Apache -1.3.4 and later.<P> - -<P> -The <SAMP>RemoveHandler</SAMP> directive removes any -handler associations for files with the given extensions. -This allows <CODE>.htaccess</CODE> files in subdirectories to undo -any associations inherited from parent directories or the server -config files. An example of its use might be: -</P> -<DL> - <DT><CODE>/foo/.htaccess:</CODE></DT> - <DD><CODE>AddHandler server-parsed .html</CODE></DD> - <DT><CODE>/foo/bar/.htaccess:</CODE></DT> - <DD><CODE>RemoveHandler .html</CODE></DD> -</DL> -<P> -This has the effect of returning <SAMP>.html</SAMP> files in the -<SAMP>/foo/bar</SAMP> directory to being treated as normal -files, rather than as candidates for parsing (see the -<A HREF="mod_include.html"><SAMP>mod_include</SAMP></A> module). -</P> -<HR> - -<H2><A NAME="sethandler">SetHandler</A></H2> - -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Syntax" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Syntax:</STRONG></A> SetHandler <EM>handler-name</EM><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Context" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Context:</STRONG></A> directory, .htaccess<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Status" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Status:</STRONG></A> Base<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Module" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Module:</STRONG></A> mod_mime<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Compatibility" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Compatibility:</STRONG></A> SetHandler is only available in Apache -1.1 and later.<P> - -<P>When placed into an <CODE>.htaccess</CODE> file or a -<CODE><Directory></CODE> or <CODE><Location></CODE> section, -this directive forces all matching files to be parsed through the -<A HREF="../handler.html">handler</A> -given by <EM>handler-name</EM>. For example, if you had a -directory you wanted to be parsed entirely as imagemap rule files, -regardless of extension, you might put the following into an -<CODE>.htaccess</CODE> file in that directory: -<PRE> - SetHandler imap-file -</PRE> - -<P>Another example: if you wanted to have the server display a status -report whenever a URL of <CODE>http://servername/status</CODE> was -called, you might put the following into access.conf: -<PRE> - <Location /status> - SetHandler server-status - </Location> -</PRE> -<HR> - -<H2><A NAME="typesconfig">TypesConfig</A></H2> -<!--%plaintext <?INDEX {\tt TypesConfig} directive> --> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Syntax" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Syntax:</STRONG></A> TypesConfig <EM>filename</EM><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Default" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Default:</STRONG></A> <CODE>TypesConfig conf/MIME.types</CODE><BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Context" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Context:</STRONG></A> server config<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Status" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Status:</STRONG></A> Base<BR> -<A - HREF="directive-dict.html#Module" - REL="Help" -><STRONG>Module:</STRONG></A> mod_mime<P> - -The TypesConfig directive sets the location of the MIME types configuration -file. <EM>Filename</EM> is relative to the -<A HREF="core.html#serverroot">ServerRoot</A>. This file sets the default list of -mappings from filename extensions to content types; changing this file is not -recommended. Use the <A HREF="#addtype">AddType</A> directive instead. The -file contains lines in the format of the arguments to an AddType command: -<BLOCKQUOTE><EM>MIME-type extension extension ...</EM></BLOCKQUOTE> -The extensions are lower-cased. Blank lines, and lines beginning with a hash -character (`#') are ignored.<P> - -<!--#include virtual="footer.html" --> -</BODY> -</HTML> - |