While Apache
0.8.x and beyond are for the most part a drop-in
replacement for NCSA's httpd and earlier versions of Apache, there are
a couple gotcha's to watch out for. These are mostly due to the fact
that the parser for config and access control files was rewritten from
scratch, so certain liberties the earlier servers took may not be
available here. These are all easily fixable. If you know of other
non-fatal problems that belong here, <
A<
LI>The basic mod_auth <
CODE>AuthGroupFile</
CODE>-specified group file
format allows commas between user names - Apache does not.<
BR>
<
LI><
P>If you follow the NCSA guidelines for setting up access restrictions
based on client domain, you may well have added entries for,
<
CODE>AuthType, AuthName, AuthUserFile</
CODE> or <
CODE>AuthGroupFile</
CODE>.
<
STRONG>None</
STRONG> of these are needed (or appropriate) for restricting access
<
P>When Apache sees <
CODE>AuthType</
CODE> it (reasonably) assumes you
are using some authorization type based on username and password.
<
P>Please remove <
CODE>AuthType</
CODE>, it's unnecessary even for NCSA.
<
LI><
CODE>AuthUserFile</
CODE> requires a full pathname. In earlier
versions of NCSA httpd and Apache, you could use a filename
relative to the .htaccess file. This could be a major security hole,
as it made it trivially easy to make a ".htpass" file in the a
directory easily accessible by the world. We recommend you store
your passwords outside your document tree.
<
LI><
CODE>OldScriptAlias</
CODE> is no longer supported.
<
LI><
CODE>exec cgi=""</
CODE> produces reasonable <
STRONG>malformed header</
STRONG>
responses when used to invoke non-CGI scripts.<
BR>
The NCSA code ignores the missing header. (bad idea)<
BR>
Solution: write CGI to the CGI spec or use <
CODE>exec cmd=""</
CODE> instead.
<
P>We might add <
CODE>virtual</
CODE> support to <
CODE>exec cmd</
CODE> to
make up for this difference.
<
LI><Limit> silliness - in the old Apache 0.6.5, a
directive of <Limit GET> would also restrict POST methods - Apache 0.8.8's new
core is correct in not presuming a limit on a GET is the same limit on a POST,
so if you are relying on that behavior you need to change your access configurations
<
LI>Icons for FancyIndexing broken - well, no, they're not broken,
icons from flat .xbm files to pretty and much smaller .gif files, courtesy of
<
A HREF="mailto:kevinh@eit.com">Kevin Hughes</
A> at
If you are using the same
srm.conf from an old distribution, make sure
<
LI>Under IRIX, the "Group" directive in
httpd.conf needs to be a
(<
EM>
i.e.</
EM>, "nogroup") not the numeric group ID. The distribution
httpd.conf, and earlier ones, had the default Group be "#-1", which
was causing silent exits at startup.<
P>
<
LI><
CODE>.asis</
CODE> files: Apache 0.6.5 did not require a Status header;
it added one automatically if the .asis file contained a Location header.
0.8.14 requires a Status header. <
P>
<
LI>Apache versions before 1.2b1 will ignore the last line of configuration
files if the last line does not have a trailing newline. This affects
htpasswd and htgroup files.
<
LI>Apache does not permit commas delimiting the methods in <Limit>.
<
LI>Apache's <
CODE><VirtualHost></
CODE> treats all addresses as
"optional" (
i.e. the server should continue booting if it can't resolve
the address). Whereas in NCSA the default is to fail booting unless
an added <
CODE>optional</
CODE> keyword is included.
<
LI>Apache does not implement <
CODE>OnDeny</
CODE> use
<
A HREF="/mod/core.html#errordocument"><
CODE>ErrorDocument</
CODE></
A>
<
LI>Apache (as of 1.3) always performs the equivalent of
<
CODE>HostnameLookups minimal</
CODE>. <
CODE>minimal</
CODE> is not an
HostnameLookups</
CODE></
A>.
<
LI>To embed spaces in directive arguments NCSA used a backslash
before the space. Apache treats backslashes as normal characters. To
embed spaces surround the argument with double-quotes instead.
<
LI>Apache does not implement the NCSA <
CODE>referer</
CODE>
PR#968</
A> for a few brief suggestions on alternative ways to
implement the same thing under Apache.
More to come when we notice them....