Раздел 2. Using the Apache HTTP Server RU EN Пункт 20. Environment Variables in Apache There are two kinds of environment variables that affect the Apache HTTP Server. First, there are the environment variables controlled by the underlying operating system. These are set before the server starts. They can be used in expansions in configuration files, and can optionally be passed to CGI scripts and SSI using the PassEnv directive. Second, the Apache HTTP Server provides a mechanism for storing information in named variables that are also called environment variables. This information can be used to control various operations such as logging or access control. The variables are also used as a mechanism to communicate with external programs such as CGI scripts. This document discusses different ways to manipulate and use these variables. Although these variables are referred to as environment variables, they are not the same as the environment variables controlled by the underlying operating system. Instead, these variables are stored and manipulated in an internal Apache structure. They only become actual operating system environment variables when they are provided to CGI scripts and Server Side Include scripts. If you wish to manipulate the operating system environment under which the server itself runs, you must use the standard environment manipulation mechanisms provided by your operating system shell. Setting Environment Variables
Basic Environment ManipulationThe most basic way to set an environment variable in Apache
is using the unconditional Conditional Per-Request SettingsFor additional flexibility, the directives provided by
Unique IdentifiersFinally, Standard CGI VariablesIn addition to all environment variables set within the Apache configuration and passed from the shell, CGI scripts and SSI pages are provided with a set of environment variables containing meta-information about the request as required by the CGI specification. Some Caveats
Using Environment Variables
CGI ScriptsOne of the primary uses of environment variables is to communicate information to CGI scripts. As discussed above, the environment passed to CGI scripts includes standard meta-information about the request in addition to any variables set within the Apache configuration. For more details, see the CGI tutorial. SSI PagesServer-parsed (SSI) documents processed by
Access ControlAccess to the server can be controlled based on the value of
environment variables using the Conditional LoggingEnvironment variables can be logged in the access log using
the Conditional Response HeadersThe External Filter ActivationExternal filters configured by URL RewritingThe Special Purpose Environment VariablesInteroperability problems have led to the introduction of
mechanisms to modify the way Apache behaves when talking to
particular clients. To make these mechanisms as flexible as
possible, they are invoked by defining environment variables,
typically with downgrade-1.0This forces the request to be treated as a HTTP/1.0 request even if it was in a later dialect. force-gzipIf you have the force-no-varyThis causes any force-response-1.0This forces an HTTP/1.0 response to clients making an HTTP/1.0 request. It was originally implemented as a result of a problem with AOL's proxies. Some HTTP/1.0 clients may not behave correctly when given an HTTP/1.1 response, and this can be used to interoperate with them. gzip-only-text/htmlWhen set to a value of "1", this variable disables the
no-gzipWhen set, the no-cacheAvailable in versions 2.2.12 and later When set, nokeepaliveThis disables prefer-languageThis influences redirect-carefullyThis forces the server to be more careful when sending a redirect to the client. This is typically used when a client has a known problem handling redirects. This was originally implemented as a result of a problem with Microsoft's WebFolders software which has a problem handling redirects on directory resources via DAV methods. suppress-error-charsetAvailable in versions after 2.0.54 When Apache issues a redirect in response to a client request, the response includes some actual text to be displayed in case the client can't (or doesn't) automatically follow the redirection. Apache ordinarily labels this text according to the character set which it uses, which is ISO-8859-1. However, if the redirection is to a page that uses a different character set, some broken browser versions will try to use the character set from the redirection text rather than the actual page. This can result in Greek, for instance, being incorrectly rendered. Setting this environment variable causes Apache to omit the character set for the redirection text, and these broken browsers will then correctly use that of the destination page. Security noteSending error pages without a specified character set may allow a cross-site-scripting attack for existing browsers (MSIE) which do not follow the HTTP/1.1 specification and attempt to "guess" the character set from the content. Such browsers can be easily fooled into using the UTF-7 character set, and UTF-7 content from input data (such as the request-URI) will not be escaped by the usual escaping mechanisms designed to prevent cross-site-scripting attacks. force-proxy-request-1.0, proxy-nokeepalive, proxy-sendchunked, proxy-sendcl, proxy-chain-auth, proxy-interim-response, proxy-initial-not-pooledThese directives alter the protocol behavior of
ExamplesPassing broken headers to CGI scriptsStarting with version 2.4, Apache is more strict about how HTTP
headers are converted to environment variables in If you have to support a client which sends broken headers and
which can't be fixed, a simple workaround involving # # The following works around a client sending a broken Accept_Encoding # header. # SetEnvIfNoCase ^Accept.Encoding$ ^(.*)$ fix_accept_encoding=$1 RequestHeader set Accept-Encoding %{fix_accept_encoding}e env=fix_accept_encoding Changing protocol behavior with misbehaving clientsEarlier versions recommended that the following lines be included in apache2.conf to deal with known client problems. Since the affected clients are no longer seen in the wild, this configuration is likely no-longer necessary. # # The following directives modify normal HTTP response behavior. # The first directive disables keepalive for Netscape 2.x and browsers that # spoof it. There are known problems with these browser implementations. # The second directive is for Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0b2 # which has a broken HTTP/1.1 implementation and does not properly # support keepalive when it is used on 301 or 302 (redirect) responses. # BrowserMatch "Mozilla/2" nokeepalive BrowserMatch "MSIE 4\.0b2;" nokeepalive downgrade-1.0 force-response-1.0 # # The following directive disables HTTP/1.1 responses to browsers which # are in violation of the HTTP/1.0 spec by not being able to understand a # basic 1.1 response. # BrowserMatch "RealPlayer 4\.0" force-response-1.0 BrowserMatch "Java/1\.0" force-response-1.0 BrowserMatch "JDK/1\.0" force-response-1.0 Do not log requests for images in the access logThis example keeps requests for images from appearing in the access log. It can be easily modified to prevent logging of particular directories, or to prevent logging of requests coming from particular hosts. SetEnvIf Request_URI \.gif image-request SetEnvIf Request_URI \.jpg image-request SetEnvIf Request_URI \.png image-request CustomLog logs/access_log common env=!image-request Prevent "Image Theft"This example shows how to keep people not on your server
from using images on your server as inline-images on their
pages. This is not a recommended configuration, but it can work
in limited circumstances. We assume that all your images are in
a directory called SetEnvIf Referer "^http://www\.example\.com/" local_referal # Allow browsers that do not send Referer info SetEnvIf Referer "^$" local_referal <Directory "/web/images"> Require env local_referal </Directory> For more information about this technique, see the "Keeping Your Images from Adorning Other Sites" tutorial on ServerWatch. |