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Дата изменения: Mon Oct 15 20:35:59 2001 Дата индексирования: Mon Oct 1 20:22:29 2012 Кодировка: Поисковые слова: п п п п п п п р п р п п п п п п |
This module provides support for dynamically configured mass virtual hosting.
Status: Extension
Source File:
mod_vhost_alias.c
Module Identifier:
vhost_alias_module
Compatibility: Available in
Apache 1.3.7 and later.
This module creates dynamically configured virtual hosts, by
allowing the IP address and/or the Host:
header of
the HTTP request to be used as part of the pathname to
determine what files to serve. This allows for easy use of a
huge number of virtual hosts with similar configurations.
See also: UseCanonicalName.
All the directives in this module interpolate a string into
a pathname. The interpolated string (henceforth called the
"name") may be either the server name (see the UseCanonicalName
directive for details on how this is determined) or the IP
address of the virtual host on the server in dotted-quad
format. The interpolation is controlled by specifiers inspired
by printf
which have a number of formats:
%%
%
%p
%N.M
N
and M
are used to specify
substrings of the name. N
selects from the
dot-separated components of the name, and M
selects characters within whatever N
has selected.
M
is optional and defaults to zero if it isn't
present; the dot must be present if and only if M
is present. The interpretation is as follows:
0
1
2
-1
-2
2+
-2+
1+
and -1+
0
If N
or M
is greater than the
number of parts available a single underscore is
interpolated.
For simple name-based virtual hosts you might use the following directives in your server configuration file:
UseCanonicalName Off VirtualDocumentRoot /usr/local/apache/vhosts/%0
A request for
http://www.example.com/directory/file.html
will be
satisfied by the file
/usr/local/apache/vhosts/www.example.com/directory/file.html
.
For a very large number of virtual hosts it is a good idea
to arrange the files to reduce the size of the
vhosts
directory. To do this you might use the
following in your configuration file:
UseCanonicalName Off VirtualDocumentRoot /usr/local/apache/vhosts/%3+/%2.1/%2.2/%2.3/%2A request for
http://www.example.isp.com/directory/file.html
will be satisfied by the file
/usr/local/apache/vhosts/isp.com/e/x/a/example/directory/file.html
.
A more even spread of files can be achieved by hashing from the
end of the name, for example:
VirtualDocumentRoot /usr/local/apache/vhosts/%3+/%2.-1/%2.-2/%2.-3/%2The example request would come from
/usr/local/apache/vhosts/isp.com/e/l/p/example/directory/file.html
.
Alternatively you might use:
VirtualDocumentRoot /usr/local/apache/vhosts/%3+/%2.1/%2.2/%2.3/%2.4+
The example request would come from
/usr/local/apache/vhosts/isp.com/e/x/a/mple/directory/file.html
.
For IP-based virtual hosting you might use the following in your configuration file:
UseCanonicalName DNS VirtualDocumentRootIP /usr/local/apache/vhosts/%1/%2/%3/%4/docs VirtualScriptAliasIP /usr/local/apache/vhosts/%1/%2/%3/%4/cgi-bin
A request for
http://www.example.isp.com/directory/file.html
would be satisfied by the file
/usr/local/apache/vhosts/10/20/30/40/docs/directory/file.html
if the IP address of www.example.com
were
10.20.30.40. A request for
http://www.example.isp.com/cgi-bin/script.pl
would
be satisfied by executing the program
/usr/local/apache/vhosts/10/20/30/40/cgi-bin/script.pl
.
If you want to include the .
character in a
VirtualDocumentRoot
directive, but it clashes with
a %
directive, you can work around the problem in
the following way:
VirtualDocumentRoot /usr/local/apache/vhosts/%2.0.%3.0
A request for
http://www.example.isp.com/directory/file.html
will be satisfied by the file
/usr/local/apache/vhosts/example.isp/directory/file.html
.
The LogFormat
directives %V
and %A
are useful
in conjunction with this module.
Syntax: VirtualDocumentRoot
interpolated-directory
Default: None
Context: server config, virtual
host
Status: Extension
Module: mod_vhost_alias
Compatibility:
VirtualDocumentRoot is only available in 1.3.7 and later.
The VirtualDocumentRoot
directive allows you to
determine where Apache will find your documents based on the
value of the server name. The result of expanding
interpolated-directory is used as the root of the
document tree in a similar manner to the DocumentRoot
directive's argument. If interpolated-directory is
none
then VirtualDocumentRoot
is
turned off. This directive cannot be used in the same context
as VirtualDocumentRootIP
.
Syntax: VirtualDocumentRootIP
interpolated-directory
Default: None
Context: server config, virtual
host
Status: Extension
Module: mod_vhost_alias
Compatibility:
VirtualDocumentRootIP is only available in 1.3.7 and later.
The VirtualDocumentRootIP
directive is like the
VirtualDocumentRoot
directive, except that it uses the IP address of the server end
of the connection instead of the server name.
Syntax: VirtualScriptAlias
interpolated-directory
Default: None
Context: server config, virtual
host
Status: Extension
Module: mod_vhost_alias
Compatibility:
VirtualScriptAlias is only available in 1.3.7 and later.
The VirtualScriptAlias
directive allows you to
determine where Apache will find CGI scripts in a similar
manner to VirtualDocumentRoot
does for other documents. It matches requests for URIs starting
/cgi-bin/
, much like ScriptAlias
/cgi-bin/
would.
Syntax: VirtualScriptAliasIP
interpolated-directory
Default: None
Context: server config, virtual
host
Status: Extension
Module: mod_vhost_alias
Compatibility:
VirtualScriptAliasIP is only available in 1.3.7 and later.
The VirtualScriptAliasIP
directive is like the
VirtualScriptAlias
directive, except that it uses the IP address of the server end
of the connection instead of the server name.