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<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <meta name="generator" content="HTML Tidy, see www.w3.org" /> <title>Apache module mod_autoindex</title> </head> <!-- Background white, links blue (unvisited), navy (visited), red (active) --> <body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#000000" link="#0000FF" vlink="#000080" alink="#FF0000"> <div align="CENTER"> <img src="../images/sub.gif" alt="[APACHE DOCUMENTATION]" /> <h3>Apache HTTP Server Version 1.3</h3> <p><small><em>Is this the version you want? For more recent versions, check our <a href="/docs/">documentation index</a>.</em></small></p> </div> <h1 align="CENTER">Module mod_autoindex</h1> This module provides for automatic directory indexing. <p><a href="module-dict.html#Status" rel="Help"><strong>Status:</strong></a> Base<br /> <a href="module-dict.html#SourceFile" rel="Help"><strong>Source File:</strong></a> mod_autoindex.c<br /> <a href="module-dict.html#ModuleIdentifier" rel="Help"><strong>Module Identifier:</strong></a> autoindex_module</p> <h2>Summary</h2> The index of a directory can come from one of two sources: <ul> <li>A file written by the user, typically called <code>index.html</code>. The <a href="mod_dir.html#directoryindex">DirectoryIndex</a> directive sets the name of this file. This is controlled by <a href="mod_dir.html"><code>mod_dir</code></a>.</li> <li>Otherwise, a listing generated by the server. The other directives control the format of this listing. The <a href="#addicon">AddIcon</a>, <a href="#addiconbyencoding">AddIconByEncoding</a> and <a href="#addiconbytype">AddIconByType</a> are used to set a list of icons to display for various file types; for each file listed, the first icon listed that matches the file is displayed. These are controlled by <code>mod_autoindex</code>.</li> </ul> The two functions are separated so that you can completely remove (or replace) automatic index generation should you want to. <p>Automatic index generation is enabled with using <code>Options +Indexes</code>. See the <a href="core.html#options"><code>Options</code></a> directive for more details.</p> <p>If <a href="#fancyindexing"><samp>FancyIndexing</samp></a> is enabled, or the <samp>FancyIndexing</samp> keyword is present on the <a href="#indexoptions"><samp>IndexOptions</samp></a> directive, the column headers are links that control the order of the display. If you select a header link, the listing will be regenerated, sorted by the values in that column. Selecting the same header repeatedly toggles between ascending and descending order.</p> <p>Note that when the display is sorted by "Size", it's the <em>actual</em> size of the files that's used, not the displayed value - so a 1010-byte file will always be displayed before a 1011-byte file (if in ascending order) even though they both are shown as "1K".</p> <h2>Directives</h2> <ul> <li><a href="#addalt">AddAlt</a></li> <li><a href="#addaltbyencoding">AddAltByEncoding</a></li> <li><a href="#addaltbytype">AddAltByType</a></li> <li><a href="#adddescription">AddDescription</a></li> <li><a href="#addicon">AddIcon</a></li> <li><a href="#addiconbyencoding">AddIconByEncoding</a></li> <li><a href="#addiconbytype">AddIconByType</a></li> <li><a href="#defaulticon">DefaultIcon</a></li> <li><a href="#fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a></li> <li><a href="#headername">HeaderName</a></li> <li><a href="#indexignore">IndexIgnore</a></li> <li><a href="#indexoptions">IndexOptions</a></li> <li><a href="#indexorderdefault">IndexOrderDefault</a></li> <li><a href="#readmename">ReadmeName</a></li> </ul> <p>See also: <a href="core.html#options">Options</a> and <a href="mod_dir.html#directoryindex">DirectoryIndex</a>.</p> <h2>Autoindex Request Query Arguments</h2> <p>The column sorting headers themselves are self-referencing hyperlinks that add the sort query options to reorder the directory listing. The query options are of the form <samp>X=Y</samp>, where <samp>X</samp> is one of <samp>N</samp> (file <em>N</em>ame), <samp>M</samp> (file last <em>M</em>odified date), <samp>S</samp> (file <em>S</em>ize), or <samp>D</samp> (file <em>D</em>escription), and <samp>Y</samp> is one of <samp>A</samp> (<em>A</em>scending) or <samp>D</samp> (<em>D</em>escending).</p> <p>When options other than the file name are used as the sorting key, the secondary key is always the file name. (When the file name is used to sort by, there is no need of a secondary sort key, since file names are guaranteed to be unique, and so the sort order is unambiguous.)</p> <p>Example:</p> <p>If the URL <samp>http://your.server.name/foo/</samp> produces a directory index, then the following URLs will produce different sort orders:</p> <ul> <li><samp>http://your.server.name/foo/?M=D</samp> sorts the directory by last modified date, descending.</li> <li><samp>http://your.server.name/foo/?D=A</samp> sorts the directory by file description, ascending.</li> <li><samp>http://your.server.name/foo/?S=A</samp> sorts the directory by file size, ascending.</li> </ul> <p>See <a href="#indexorderdefault"><samp>IndexOrderDefault</samp></a> to set the default directory ordering.</p> <p>Note also that when the directory listing is ordered in one direction (ascending or descending) by a particular column, the link at the top of that column then reverses, to allow sorting in the opposite direction by that same column.</p> <hr /> <h2><a id="addalt" name="addalt">AddAlt</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> AddAlt <em>string file</em> [<em>file</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>This sets the alternate text to display for a file, instead of an icon, for <a href="#fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a>. <em>File</em> is a file extension, partial filename, wild-card expression or full filename for files to describe. <em>String</em> is enclosed in double quotes (<code>"</code>). This alternate text is displayed if the client is image-incapable or has image loading disabled.</p> <p>Examples:</p> <pre> AddAlt "PDF" *.pdf AddAlt "Compressed" *.gz *.zip *.Z </pre> <hr /> <h2><a id="addaltbyencoding" name="addaltbyencoding">AddAltByEncoding</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> AddAltByEncoding <em>string MIME-encoding</em> [<em>MIME-encoding</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>This sets the alternate text to display for a file, instead of an icon, for <a href="#fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a>. <em>MIME-encoding</em> is a valid content-encoding, such as <samp>x-compress</samp>. <em>String</em> is enclosed in double quotes (<code>"</code>). This alternate text is displayed if the client is image-incapable or has image loading disabled.</p> <p>Example:</p> <pre> AddAltByEncoding "gzip" x-gzip </pre> <hr /> <h2><a id="addaltbytype" name="addaltbytype">AddAltByType</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> AddAltByType <em>string MIME-type</em> [<em>MIME-type</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>This sets the alternate text to display for a file, instead of an icon, for <a href="#fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a>. <em>MIME-type</em> is a valid content-type, such as <samp>text/html</samp>. <em>String</em> is enclosed in double quotes (<code>"</code>). This alternate text is displayed if the client is image-incapable or has image loading disabled.</p> <p>Example:</p> <pre> AddAltByType "TXT" text/plain </pre> <hr /> <h2><a id="adddescription" name="adddescription">AddDescription</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> AddDescription <em>"string" file|directory</em> [<em>file|directory</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>This sets the description to display for a file or directory, for <a href="#indexoptions">IndexOptions FancyIndexing</a>. <em>file|directory</em> is a file extension, partial filename or directory name, wild-card expression or full filename or directory name, for files or directories to describe. <em>String</em> is enclosed in double quotes (<code>"</code>). Example:</p> <blockquote> <code>AddDescription "The planet Mars" /web/pics/mars.gif</code> </blockquote> <p>The description field is 23 bytes wide. 7 more bytes may be added if the directory is covered by an <code>IndexOptions SuppressSize</code>, and 19 bytes may be added if <code>IndexOptions SuppressLastModified</code> is in effect. The widest this column can be is therefore 49 bytes.</p> <blockquote> As of Apache 1.3.10, the <a href="#indexoptions:descriptionwidth">DescriptionWidth</a> <samp>IndexOptions</samp> keyword allows you to adjust this width to any arbitrary size. </blockquote> <b>Caution:</b> Descriptive text defined with <samp>AddDescription</samp> may contain HTML markup, such as tags and character entities. If the width of the description column should happen to truncate a tagged element (such as cutting off the end of a bolded phrase), the results may affect the rest of the directory listing. <hr /> <h2><a id="addicon" name="addicon">AddIcon</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> AddIcon <em>icon name</em> [<em>name</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>This sets the icon to display next to a file ending in <em>name</em> for <a href="#fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a>. <em>Icon</em> is either a (%-escaped) relative URL to the icon, or of the format (<em>alttext</em>,<em>url</em>) where <em>alttext</em> is the text tag given for an icon for non-graphical browsers.</p> <p><em>Name</em> is either ^^DIRECTORY^^ for directories, ^^BLANKICON^^ for blank lines (to format the list correctly), a file extension, a wildcard expression, a partial filename or a complete filename. Examples:</p> <blockquote> <code>AddIcon (IMG,/icons/image2.gif) .gif .jpg .png<br /> AddIcon /icons/dir.gif ^^DIRECTORY^^<br /> AddIcon /icons/backup.gif *~</code> </blockquote> <a href="#addiconbytype">AddIconByType</a> should be used in preference to AddIcon, when possible. <hr /> <h2><a id="addiconbyencoding" name="addiconbyencoding">AddIconByEncoding</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> AddIconByEncoding <em>icon MIME-encoding</em> [<em>MIME-encoding</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>This sets the icon to display next to files with <em>MIME-encoding</em> for <a href="#fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a>. <em>Icon</em> is either a (%-escaped) relative URL to the icon, or of the format (<em>alttext</em>,<em>url</em>) where <em>alttext</em> is the text tag given for an icon for non-graphical browsers.</p> <p><em>Mime-encoding</em> is a wildcard expression matching required the content-encoding. Examples:</p> <blockquote> <code>AddIconByEncoding /icons/compressed.gif x-compress</code> </blockquote> <hr /> <h2><a id="addiconbytype" name="addiconbytype">AddIconByType</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> AddIconByType <em>icon MIME-type</em> [<em>MIME-type</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>This sets the icon to display next to files of type <em>MIME-type</em> for <a href="#fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a>. <em>Icon</em> is either a (%-escaped) relative URL to the icon, or of the format (<em>alttext</em>,<em>url</em>) where <em>alttext</em> is the text tag given for an icon for non-graphical browsers.</p> <p><em>Mime-type</em> is a wildcard expression matching required the mime types. Examples:</p> <blockquote> <code>AddIconByType (IMG,/icons/image3.gif) image/*</code> </blockquote> <hr /> <h2><a id="defaulticon" name="defaulticon">DefaultIcon</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> DefaultIcon <em>url</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>The DefaultIcon directive sets the icon to display for files when no specific icon is known, for <a href="#fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a>. <em>Url</em> is a (%-escaped) relative URL to the icon. Examples:</p> <blockquote> <code>DefaultIcon /icon/unknown.xbm</code> </blockquote> <hr /> <h2><a id="fancyindexing" name="fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> FancyIndexing on|off<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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>The FancyIndexing directive sets the FancyIndexing option for a directory. The <a href="#indexoptions">IndexOptions</a> directive should be used in preference.</p> <blockquote> <strong>Note that in versions of Apache prior to 1.3.2, the <samp>FancyIndexing</samp> and <samp>IndexOptions</samp> directives will override each other. You should use <samp>IndexOptions FancyIndexing</samp> in preference to the standalone <samp>FancyIndexing</samp> directive. As of Apache 1.3.2, a standalone <samp>FancyIndexing</samp> directive is combined with any <samp>IndexOptions</samp> directive already specified for the current scope.</strong> </blockquote> <hr /> <h2><a id="headername" name="headername">HeaderName</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> HeaderName <em>filename</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <br /> <a href="directive-dict.html#Compatibility" rel="Help"><strong>Compatibility:</strong></a> some features only available after 1.3.6; see text <p>The HeaderName directive sets the name of the file that will be inserted at the top of the index listing. <em>Filename</em> is the name of the file to include.</p> <p> <em>Filename</em> is treated as a URI path relative to the one used to access the directory being indexed. Note that this means that if <em>Filename</em> starts with a slash, it will be taken to be relative to the <a href="core.html#documentroot">DocumentRoot</a>.</p> <p><em>Filename</em> must resolve to a document with a major content type of "<samp>text</samp>" (<em>e.g.</em>, <samp>text/html</samp>, <samp>text/plain</samp>, <em>etc.</em>). This means that <em>filename</em> may refer to a CGI script if the script's actual file type (as opposed to its output) is marked as <samp>text/html</samp> such as with a directive like: </p> <pre> AddType text/html .cgi </pre> <a href="../content-negotiation.html">Content negotiation</a> will be performed if the <samp>MultiViews</samp> <a href="core.html#options">option</a> is enabled. If <em>filename</em> resolves to a static <samp>text/html</samp> document (not a CGI script) and the <samp>Includes</samp> <a href="core.html#options">option</a> is enabled, the file will be processed for server-side includes (see the <a href="mod_include.html"><samp>mod_include</samp></a> documentation). <p>If the file specified by <samp>HeaderName</samp> contains the beginnings of an HTML document (<HTML>, <HEAD>, etc) then you will probably want to set <a href="#indexoptions:suppresshtmlpreamble"><samp>IndexOptions +SuppressHTMLPreamble</samp></a>, so that these tags are not repeated.</p> <blockquote> <strong>Apache 1.3.6 and earlier:</strong> The module first attempts to include <em>filename</em><code>.html</code> as an HTML document, otherwise it will try to include <em>filename</em> as plain text. <em>Filename</em> is treated as a filesystem path relative to the directory being indexed. In no case is SSI processing done. Example: <blockquote> <code>HeaderName HEADER</code> </blockquote> when indexing the directory <code>/web</code>, the server will first look for the HTML file <code>/web/HEADER.html</code> and include it if found, otherwise it will include the plain text file <code>/web/HEADER</code>, if it exists. </blockquote> <p>See also <a href="#readmename">ReadmeName</a>.</p> <hr /> <h2><a id="indexignore" name="indexignore">IndexIgnore</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> IndexIgnore <em>file</em> [<em>file</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <p>The IndexIgnore directive adds to the list of files to hide when listing a directory. <em>File</em> is a file extension, partial filename, wildcard expression or full filename for files to ignore. Multiple IndexIgnore directives add to the list, rather than replacing the list of ignored files. By default, the list contains `<code>.</code>'. Example:</p> <blockquote> <code>IndexIgnore README .htaccess *~</code> </blockquote> <hr /> <h2><a id="indexoptions" name="indexoptions">IndexOptions</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> IndexOptions <em>option</em> [<em>option</em>] ... (Apache 1.3.2 and earlier) <br /> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> IndexOptions [+|-]<em>option</em> [[+|-]<em>option</em>] ... (Apache 1.3.3 and later) <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> Indexes<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_autoindex <br /> <a href="directive-dict.html#Compatibility" rel="Help"><strong>Compatibility:</strong></a> '+/-' syntax and merging of multiple <samp>IndexOptions</samp> directives is only available with Apache 1.3.3 and later; the <samp>FoldersFirst</samp> and <samp>DescriptionWidth</samp> options are only available with Apache 1.3.10 and later; the <samp>TrackModified</samp> option is only available with Apache 1.3.15 and later; the <samp>IgnoreCase</samp> option is only available with Apache 1.3.24 and later <p>The IndexOptions directive specifies the behavior of the directory indexing. <em>Option</em> can be one of</p> <dl> <dt><a id="indexoptions:descriptionwidth" name="indexoptions:descriptionwidth">DescriptionWidth=[<em>n</em> | *] (<em>Apache 1.3.10 and later</em>)</a></dt> <dd>The <samp>DescriptionWidth</samp> keyword allows you to specify the width of the description column in characters. If the keyword value is '<samp>*</samp>', then the column is automatically sized to the length of the longest filename in the display. <b>See the section on <a href="#adddescription"><samp>AddDescription</samp></a> for dangers inherent in truncating descriptions.</b></dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:fancyindexing" name="indexoptions:fancyindexing">FancyIndexing</a></dt> <dd> This turns on fancy indexing of directories. <blockquote> <strong>Note that in versions of Apache prior to 1.3.2, the <samp>FancyIndexing</samp> and <samp>IndexOptions</samp> directives will override each other. You should use <samp>IndexOptions FancyIndexing</samp> in preference to the standalone <samp>FancyIndexing</samp> directive. As of Apache 1.3.2, a standalone <samp>FancyIndexing</samp> directive is combined with any <samp>IndexOptions</samp> directive already specified for the current scope.</strong> </blockquote> </dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:foldersfirst" name="indexoptions:foldersfirst">FoldersFirst (<i>Apache 1.3.10 and later</i>)</a></dt> <dd>If this option is enabled, subdirectories in a FancyIndexed listing will <i>always</i> appear first, followed by normal files in the directory. The listing is basically broken into two components, the files and the subdirectories, and each is sorted separately and then displayed subdirectories-first. For instance, if the sort order is descending by name, and <samp>FoldersFirst</samp> is enabled, subdirectory <samp>Zed</samp> will be listed before subdirectory <samp>Beta</samp>, which will be listed before normal files <samp>Gamma</samp> and <samp>Alpha</samp>. <b>This option only has an effect if <a href="#indexoptions:fancyindexing"><samp>FancyIndexing</samp></a> is also enabled.</b></dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:iconheight" name="indexoptions:iconheight">IconHeight[=pixels] (<em>Apache 1.3 and later</em>)</a></dt> <dd> Presence of this option, when used with IconWidth, will cause the server to include <samp>HEIGHT</samp> and <samp>WIDTH</samp> attributes in the <samp>IMG</samp> tag for the file icon. This allows browser to precalculate the page layout without having to wait until all the images have been loaded. If no value is given for the option, it defaults to the standard height of the icons supplied with the Apache software.</dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:iconsarelinks" name="indexoptions:iconsarelinks">IconsAreLinks</a></dt> <dd> This makes the icons part of the anchor for the filename, for fancy indexing.</dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:iconwidth" name="indexoptions:iconwidth">IconWidth[=pixels] (<em>Apache 1.3 and later</em>)</a></dt> <dd> Presence of this option, when used with IconHeight, will cause the server to include <samp>HEIGHT</samp> and <samp>WIDTH</samp> attributes in the <samp>IMG</samp> tag for the file icon. This allows browser to precalculate the page layout without having to wait until all the images have been loaded. If no value is given for the option, it defaults to the standard width of the icons supplied with the Apache software.</dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:ignorecase" name="indexoptions:ignorecase">IgnoreCase</a> (<em>Apache 1.3.24 and later</em>)</dt> <dd> If this option is enabled, names are sorted in case-insensitive manner. For instance, if the sort order is ascending by name, and <samp>IgnoreCase</samp> is enabled, file <samp>Zeta</samp> will be listed after file <samp>alfa</samp> (Note: file <samp>GAMMA</samp> will always be listed before file <samp>gamma</samp>). <b>This option only has an effect if <a href="#indexoptions:fancyindexing"><samp>FancyIndexing</samp></a> is also enabled.</b></dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:namewidth" name="indexoptions:namewidth">NameWidth=[<em>n</em> | *] (<em>Apache 1.3.2 and later</em>)</a></dt> <dd>The NameWidth keyword allows you to specify the width of the filename column in bytes. If the keyword value is '<samp>*</samp>', then the column is automatically sized to the length of the longest filename in the display.</dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:scanhtmltitles" name="indexoptions:scanhtmltitles">ScanHTMLTitles</a></dt> <dd> This enables the extraction of the title from HTML documents for fancy indexing. If the file does not have a description given by <a href="#adddescription">AddDescription</a> then httpd will read the document for the value of the TITLE tag. This is CPU and disk intensive.</dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:suppresscolumnsorting" name="indexoptions:suppresscolumnsorting">SuppressColumnSorting</a></dt> <dd> If specified, Apache will not make the column headings in a FancyIndexed directory listing into links for sorting. The default behavior is for them to be links; selecting the column heading will sort the directory listing by the values in that column. <strong>Only available in Apache 1.3 and later.</strong></dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:suppressdescription" name="indexoptions:suppressdescription">SuppressDescription</a></dt> <dd> This will suppress the file description in fancy indexing listings. By default, no file descriptions are defined, and so the use of this option will regain 23 characters of screen space to use for something else. See <a href="#adddescription"><samp>AddDescription</samp></a> for information about setting the file description. See also the <a href="#indexoptions:descriptionwidth"><samp>DescriptionWidth</samp></a> index option to limit the size of the description column.</dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:suppresshtmlpreamble" name="indexoptions:suppresshtmlpreamble">SuppressHTMLPreamble</a> (<em>Apache 1.3 and later</em>)</dt> <dd> If the directory actually contains a file specified by the <a href="#headername">HeaderName</a> directive, the module usually includes the contents of the file after a standard HTML preamble (<HTML>, <HEAD>, <em>et cetera</em>). The SuppressHTMLPreamble option disables this behavior, causing the module to start the display with the header file contents. The header file must contain appropriate HTML instructions in this case. If there is no header file, the preamble is generated as usual.</dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:suppresslastmodified" name="indexoptions:suppresslastmodified">SuppressLastModified</a></dt> <dd> This will suppress the display of the last modification date, in fancy indexing listings.</dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:suppresssize" name="indexoptions:suppresssize">SuppressSize</a></dt> <dd> This will suppress the file size in fancy indexing listings.</dd> <dt><a id="indexoptions:trackmodified" name="indexoptions:trackmodified">TrackModified (<em>Apache 1.3.15 and later</em>)</a></dt> <dd> This returns the Last-Modified and ETag values for the listed directory in the HTTP header. It is only valid if the operating system and file system return legitimate stat() results. Most Unix systems do so, as do OS2's JFS and Win32's NTFS volumes. OS2 and Win32 FAT volumes, for example, do not. Once this feature is enabled, the client or proxy can track changes to the list of files when they perform a HEAD request. Note some operating systems correctly track new and removed files, but do not track changes for sizes or dates of the files within the directory.</dd> </dl> <p>There are some noticeable differences in the behavior of this directive in recent (post-1.3.0) versions of Apache.</p> <dl> <dt>Apache 1.3.2 and earlier:</dt> <dd> <p>The default is that no options are enabled. If multiple IndexOptions could apply to a directory, then the most specific one is taken complete; the options are not merged. For example:</p> <blockquote> <pre> <Directory /web/docs> IndexOptions FancyIndexing </Directory> <Directory /web/docs/spec> IndexOptions ScanHTMLTitles </Directory> </pre> </blockquote> then only <code>ScanHTMLTitles</code> will be set for the /web/docs/spec directory. </dd> <dt>Apache 1.3.3 and later:</dt> <dd> <p>Apache 1.3.3 introduced some significant changes in the handling of <samp>IndexOptions</samp> directives. In particular,</p> <ul> <li>Multiple <samp>IndexOptions</samp> directives for a single directory are now merged together. The result of the example above will now be the equivalent of <code>IndexOptions FancyIndexing ScanHTMLTitles</code>.</li> <li>The addition of the incremental syntax (<em>i.e.</em>, prefixing keywords with '+' or '-').</li> </ul> <p>Whenever a '+' or '-' prefixed keyword is encountered, it is applied to the current <samp>IndexOptions</samp> settings (which may have been inherited from an upper-level directory). However, whenever an unprefixed keyword is processed, it clears all inherited options and any incremental settings encountered so far. Consider the following example:</p> <blockquote> <code>IndexOptions +ScanHTMLTitles -IconsAreLinks FancyIndexing<br /> IndexOptions +SuppressSize<br /> </code> </blockquote> <p>The net effect is equivalent to <code>IndexOptions FancyIndexing +SuppressSize</code>, because the unprefixed <code>FancyIndexing</code> discarded the incremental keywords before it, but allowed them to start accumulating again afterward.</p> <p>To unconditionally set the <code>IndexOptions</code> for a particular directory, clearing the inherited settings, specify keywords without either '+' or '-' prefixes.</p> </dd> </dl> <hr /> <h2><a id="indexorderdefault" name="indexorderdefault">IndexOrderDefault</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> IndexOrderDefault Ascending|Descending Name|Date|Size|Description <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> Indexes <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_autoindex <br /> <a href="directive-dict.html#Compatibility" rel="Help"><strong>Compatibility:</strong></a> IndexOrderDefault is only available in Apache 1.3.4 and later. <p>The <samp>IndexOrderDefault</samp> directive is used in combination with the <a href="#indexoptions:fancyindexing"><samp>FancyIndexing</samp></a> index option. By default, fancyindexed directory listings are displayed in ascending order by filename; the <samp>IndexOrderDefault</samp> allows you to change this initial display order.</p> <p><samp>IndexOrderDefault</samp> takes two arguments. The first must be either <samp>Ascending</samp> or <samp>Descending</samp>, indicating the direction of the sort. The second argument must be one of the keywords <samp>Name</samp>, <samp>Date</samp>, <samp>Size</samp>, or <samp>Description</samp>, and identifies the primary key. The secondary key is <em>always</em> the ascending filename.</p> <p>You can force a directory listing to only be displayed in a particular order by combining this directive with the <a href="#indexoptions:suppresscolumnsorting"><samp>SuppressColumnSorting</samp></a> index option; this will prevent the client from requesting the directory listing in a different order.</p> <hr /> <h2><a id="readmename" name="readmename">ReadmeName</a> directive</h2> <a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax" rel="Help"><strong>Syntax:</strong></a> ReadmeName <em>filename</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> Indexes<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_autoindex <br /> <a href="directive-dict.html#Compatibility" rel="Help"><strong>Compatibility:</strong></a> some features only available after 1.3.6; see text <p>The ReadmeName directive sets the name of the file that will be appended to the end of the index listing. <em>Filename</em> is the name of the file to include, and is taken to be relative to the location being indexed.</p> <blockquote> <strong>The <em>filename</em> argument is treated as a stub filename in Apache 1.3.6 and earlier, and as a relative URI in later versions. Details of how it is handled may be found under the description of the <a href="#headername">HeaderName</a> directive, which uses the same mechanism and changed at the same time as ReadmeName.</strong> </blockquote> <p>See also <a href="#headername">HeaderName</a>.</p> <p> <hr /> <h3 align="CENTER">Apache HTTP Server Version 1.3</h3> <a href="./"><img src="../images/index.gif" alt="Index" /></a> <a href="../"><img src="../images/home.gif" alt="Home" /></a> </p> </body> </html>