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Дата изменения: Mon Oct 15 20:35:58 2001
Дата индексирования: Mon Oct 1 20:06:17 2012
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Поисковые слова: ngc 4736
Apache module mod_browser
[APACHE DOCUMENTATION]

Apache HTTP Server Version 1.3

Module mod_browser

This module is contained in the mod_browser.c file, and is compiled in by default. It provides for setting environment variables based on the browser. This module is part of Apache 1.2.* only. From Apache 1.3 onwards mod_setenvif provides the functionality of this module.

Summary

This module allows you to set environment variables based on the name of the browser accessing your document, based on the User-Agent header field. This is especially useful when combined with a conditional HTML language such as XSSI or PHP, and can provide for simple browser-based negotiation of HTML features.

Directives


BrowserMatch

Syntax: BrowserMatch regex attr1 attr2...
Context: server config
Status: base
Module: mod_browser
Compatibility: Apache 1.2 and above

The BrowserMatch directive defines environment variables based on the User-Agent header. The first argument should be a POSIX.2 extended regular expression (similar to an egrep-style regex). The rest of the arguments give names of variables to set. These take the form of either "varname", "!varname" or "varname=value". In the first form, the value will be set to "1". The second will remove the given variable if already defined, and the third will set the variable to the value given by value. If a User-Agent string matches more than one entry, they will be merged. Entries are processed in the order they appear, and later entries can override earlier ones.

For example:

    BrowserMatch ^Mozilla forms jpeg=yes browser=netscape
    BrowserMatch "^Mozilla/[2-3]" tables agif frames javascript
    BrowserMatch MSIE !javascript

BrowserMatchNoCase

Syntax: BrowserMatchNoCase regex attr1 attr2...
Context: server config
Status: base
Module: mod_browser
Compatibility: Apache 1.2 and above

The BrowserMatchNoCase directive is semantically identical to the BrowserMatch directive. However, it provides for case-insensitive matching. For example:

    BrowserMatchNoCase mac platform=macintosh
    BrowserMatchNoCase win platform=windows


Apache HTTP Server Version 1.3

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