Apache HTTP Server Version 2.0
Server-Wide Configuration
This document explains some of the directives provided by the
coreserver which are used to configure the basic operations of the server.Server Identification
Related Modules Related Directives ServerNameServerAdminServerSignatureServerTokensUseCanonicalNameThe
ServerAdminandServerTokensdirectives control what information about the server will be presented in server-generated documents such as error messages. TheServerTokensdirective sets the value of the Server HTTP response header field.The
ServerNameandUseCanonicalNamedirectives are used by the server to determine how to construct self-referential URLs. For example, when a client requests a directory, but does not include the trailing slash in the directory name, Apache must redirect the client to the full name including the trailing slash so that the client will correctly resolve relative references in the document.File Locations
Related Modules Related Directives CoreDumpDirectoryDocumentRootErrorLogLockFilePidFileScoreBoardFileServerRootThese directives control the locations of the various files that Apache needs for proper operation. When the pathname used does not begin with a slash (/), the files are located relative to the
ServerRoot. Be careful about locating files in paths which are writable by non-root users. See the security tips documentation for more details.Limiting Resource Usage
Related Modules Related Directives LimitRequestBodyLimitRequestFieldsLimitRequestFieldsizeLimitRequestLineRLimitCPURLimitMEMRLimitNPROCThreadStackSizeThe
LimitRequest* directives are used to place limits on the amount of resources Apache will use in reading requests from clients. By limiting these values, some kinds of denial of service attacks can be mitigated.The
RLimit* directives are used to limit the amount of resources which can be used by processes forked off from the Apache children. In particular, this will control resources used by CGI scripts and SSI exec commands.The
ThreadStackSizedirective is used only on Netware to control the stack size.

