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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>How Directory, Location and Files sections work</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">How Directory, Location and Files sections work</h1> <p>The sections <a href="mod/core.html#directory"><code><Directory></code></a>, <a href="mod/core.html#location"><code><Location></code></a> and <a href="mod/core.html#files"><code><Files></code></a> can contain directives which only apply to specified directories, URLs or files respectively. Also htaccess files can be used inside a directory to apply directives to that directory. This document explains how these different sections differ and how they relate to each other when Apache decides which directives apply for a particular directory or request URL.</p> <h2>Directives allowed in the sections</h2> <p>Everything that is syntactically allowed in <code><Directory></code> is also allowed in <code><Location></code> (except a sub-<code><Files></code> section). Semantically, however some things, most notably <code>AllowOverride</code> and the two options <code>FollowSymLinks</code> and <code>SymLinksIfOwnerMatch</code>, make no sense in <code><Location></code>, <code><LocationMatch></code> or <code><DirectoryMatch></code>. The same for <code><Files></code> -- syntactically everything is fine, but semantically some things are different.</p> <h2>How the sections are merged</h2> <p>The order of merging is:</p> <ol> <li><code><Directory></code> (except regular expressions) and .htaccess done simultaneously (with .htaccess, if allowed, overriding <code><Directory></code>)</li> <li><code><DirectoryMatch></code>, and <code><Directory></code> with regular expressions</li> <li><code><Files></code> and <code><FilesMatch></code> done simultaneously</li> <li><code><Location></code> and <code><LocationMatch></code> done simultaneously</li> </ol> <p>Apart from <code><Directory></code>, each group is processed in the order that they appear in the configuration files. <code><Directory></code> (group 1 above) is processed in the order shortest directory component to longest. If multiple <code><Directory></code> sections apply to the same directory they are processed in the configuration file order. The configuration files are read in the order httpd.conf, srm.conf and access.conf. Configurations included via the <code>Include</code> directive will be treated as if they were inside the including file at the location of the <code>Include</code> directive.</p> <p>Sections inside <code><VirtualHost></code> sections are applied <em>after</em> the corresponding sections outside the virtual host definition. This allows virtual hosts to override the main server configuration. (Note: this only works correctly from 1.2.2 and 1.3a2 onwards. Before those releases sections inside virtual hosts were applied <em>before</em> the main server).</p> <p>Later sections override earlier ones.</p> <h2>Notes about using sections</h2> <p>The general guidelines are:</p> <ul> <li>If you are attempting to match objects at the filesystem level then you must use <code><Directory></code> and/or <code><Files></code>.</li> <li>If you are attempting to match objects at the URL level then you must use <code><Location></code></li> </ul> <p>But a notable exception is:</p> <ul> <li>proxy control is done via <code><Directory></code>. This is a legacy mistake because the proxy existed prior to <code><Location></code>. A future version of the config language should probably switch this to <code><Location></code>.</li> </ul> <p>Note about .htaccess parsing:</p> <ul> <li>Modifying .htaccess parsing during Location doesn't do anything because .htaccess parsing has already occurred.</li> </ul> <p><code><Location></code> and symbolic links:</p> <ul> <li>It is not possible to use "<code>Options FollowSymLinks</code>" or "<code>Options SymLinksIfOwnerMatch</code>" inside a <code><Location></code>, <code><LocationMatch></code> or <code><DirectoryMatch></code> section (the options are simply ignored). Using the options in question is only possible inside a <code><Directory></code> section (or a <code>.htaccess</code> file).</li> </ul> <p><code><Files></code> and <code>Options</code>:</p> <ul> <li>Apache won't check for it, but using an <code>Options</code> directive inside a <code><Files></code> section has no effect.</li> </ul> <p>Another note:</p> <ul> <li>There is actually a <code><Location></code>/<code><LocationMatch></code> sequence performed just before the name translation phase (where <code>Aliases</code> and <code>DocumentRoots</code> are used to map URLs to filenames). The results of this sequence are completely thrown away after the translation has completed.</li> </ul> <hr /> <h3 align="CENTER">Apache HTTP Server</h3> <a href="./"><img src="images/index.gif" alt="Index" /></a> </body> </html>