mod_include.c file, and
is compiled in by default. It provides for server-parsed html
documents. Several directives beyond the original NCSA definition have been
included in Apache 1.2 - these are flagged below with the phrase
"Apache 1.2 and above".  Of particular significance are the new flow 
control directives documented at the bottom.
Includes option is set. If documents
containing server-side include directives are given the extension
.shtml, the following directives will make Apache parse them and
assign the resulting document the mime type of text/html:
AddType text/html .shtml AddHandler server-parsed .shtmlThe following directive must be given for the directories containing the shtml files (typically in a
<Directory> section,
but this directive is also valid .htaccess files if AllowOverride
Options is set):
Options +IncludesAlternatively the
XBitHack
directive can be used to parse normal (text/html) files,
based on file permissions.  
For backwards compatibility, documents with mime type
text/x-server-parsed-html or
text/x-server-parsed-html3 will also be parsed
(and the resulting output given the mime type text/html).
The value will often be enclosed in double quotes; many commands only allow a single attribute-value pair.<!--#element attribute=value attribute=value ...-->
The allowed elements are:
bytes for a count in bytes, or
abbrev for a count in Kb or Mb as appropriate.
strftime(3) library
routine when printing dates.
(none).
Any dates printed are subject to the currently configured timefmt.
Attributes:
The CGI script is given the PATH_INFO and query string (QUERY_STRING) of the original request from the client; these cannot be specified in the URL path. The include variables will be available to the script in addition to the standard CGI environment.
If the script returns a Location: header instead of output, then this will be translated into an HTML anchor.
The include virtual element should be used in preference to
exec cgi.
/bin/sh.
The include variables are available to the command.
sizefmt format specification. Attributes:
timefmt format specification. The attributes are
the same as for the fsize command.
An attribute defines the location of the document; the inclusion is done for each attribute given to the include command. The valid attributes are:
../, nor can it be an
absolute path. The virtual attribute should always be used
in preference to this one.
<!--#printenv -->
<!--#set var="category" value="help"-->
echo command, for if and elif, and to any program invoked by the document.
    <!--#if expr="test_condition" -->
    <!--#elif expr="test_condition" -->
    <!--#else -->
    <!--#endif -->
 The if element works like an
    if statement in a programming language.  The test condition
    is evaluated and if the result is true, then the text until
    the next elif, else.
    or endif element is included in the
    output stream.
 The elif or else
    statements are be used the put text into the output stream
    if the original test_condition was false.  These elements
    are optional.
 The endif element ends the 
    if element and is required.
test_condition is one of the following:
"=" and "!=" bind more tightly than "&&" and "||". "!" binds most tightly. Thus, the following are equivalent:
    <!--#if expr="$a = test1 && $b = test2" -->
    <!--#if expr="($a = test1) && ($b = test2)" -->
Anything that's not recognized as a variable or an operator is treated as a string. Strings can also be quoted: 'string'. Unquoted strings can't contain whitespace (blanks and tabs) because it is used to separate tokens such as variables. If multiple strings are found in a row, they are concatenated using blanks. So,
     string1    string2  results in string1 string2
    'string1    string2' results in string1    string2
Variable substitution is done within quoted strings. You can put a dollar sign into the string using backslash quoting:
    <!--#if expr="$a = \$test" -->
EXAMPLE: the below example will print "in foo" if the DOCUMENT_URI is /foo/file.html, "in bar" if it is /bar/file.html and "in neither" otherwise:
    <!--#if expr="\"$DOCUMENT_URI\" = \"/foo/file.html\""-->
    in foo
    <!--#elif expr="\"$DOCUMENT_URI\" = \"/bar/file.html\""-->
    in bar
    <!--#else -->
    in neither
    <!--#endif -->
XBitHack off
The XBitHack directives controls the parsing of ordinary html documents.
This directive only affects files associated with the MIME type
text/html. 
Status can have the following values:
on but also test the group-execute bit. If it
is set, then set the Last-modified date of the returned file to be the
last modified time of the file. If it is not set, then no last-modified date
is sent. Setting this bit allows clients and proxies to cache the result of
the request.
Note: you would not want to use this, for example, when you
#include a CGI that produces different output on each hit
(or potentially depends on the hit).