Configuring Apache to listen on specific addresses and ports.
When Apache starts, it binds to some port and address on the local machine and waits for incoming requests. By default, it listens to all addresses on the machine. However, it needs to be told to listen on specific ports, or to listen on only selected addresses, or a combination. This is often combined with the Virtual Host feature which determines how Apache responds to different IP addresses, hostnames and ports.
The
For example, to make the server accept connections on both port 80 and port 8000, use:
To make the server accept connections on two specified interfaces and port numbers, use
IPv6 addresses must be surrounded in square brackets, as in the following example:
A growing number of platforms implement IPv6, and APR supports IPv6 on most of these platforms, allowing Apache to allocate IPv6 sockets and handle requests which were sent over IPv6.
One complicating factor for Apache administrators is whether or not an IPv6 socket can handle both IPv4 connections and IPv6 connections. Handling IPv4 connections with an IPv6 socket uses IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses, which are allowed by default on most platforms but are disallowed by default on FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD in order to match the system-wide policy on those platforms. But even on systems where it is disallowed by default, a special configure parameter can change this behavior for Apache.
On the other hand, on some platforms such as Linux and Tru64 the
only way to handle both IPv6 and IPv4 is to use
mapped addresses. If you want Apache to handle IPv4 and IPv6 connections
with a minimum of sockets, which requires using IPv4-mapped IPv6
addresses, specify the --enable-v4-mapped
configure
option.
--enable-v4-mapped
is the default on all platforms but
FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD, so this is probably how your Apache was
built.
If you want Apache to handle IPv4 connections only, regardless of what your platform and APR will support, specify an IPv4 address on all Listen directives, as in the following examples:
If your platform supports it and you want Apache to handle IPv4 and
IPv6 connections on separate sockets (i.e., to disable IPv4-mapped
addresses), specify the --disable-v4-mapped
configure
option. --disable-v4-mapped
is the default on FreeBSD,
NetBSD, and OpenBSD.
Listen does not implement Virtual Hosts. It only tells the
main server what addresses and ports to listen to. If no