As implemented in Apache 1.1.1 and earlier versions, the method Apache used to create PATH_INFO in the CGI environment was counterintuitive, and could result in crashes in certain cases. In Apache 1.2 and beyond, this behavior has changed. Although this results in some compatibility problems with certain legacy CGI applications, the Apache 1.2 behavior is still compatible with the CGI/1.1 specification, and CGI scripts can be easily modified (see below).
Apache 1.1.1 and earlier implemented the PATH_INFO and SCRIPT_NAME environment variables by looking at the filename, not the URL. While this resulted in the correct values in many cases, when the filesystem path was overloaded to contain path information, it could result in errant behavior. For example, if the following appeared in a config file:
     Alias /cgi-ralph /usr/local/httpd/cgi-bin/user.cgi/ralph
    In this case, user.cgi is the CGI script, the
    "/ralph" is information to be passed onto the CGI. If this
    configuration was in place, and a request came for
    "/cgi-ralph/script/", the code would set PATH_INFO
    to "/ralph/script", and SCRIPT_NAME to
    "/cgi-". Obviously, the latter is incorrect. In
    certain cases, this could even cause the server to crash.
Apache 1.2 and later now determine SCRIPT_NAME and PATH_INFO
    by looking directly at the URL, and determining how much of the
    URL is client-modifiable, and setting PATH_INFO to it. To use
    the above example, PATH_INFO would be set to
    "/script", and SCRIPT_NAME to
    "/cgi-ralph". This makes sense and results in no
    server behavior problems. It also permits the script to be
    guaranteed that
    "http://$SERVER_NAME:$SERVER_PORT$SCRIPT_NAME$PATH_INFO"
    will always be an accessible URL that points to the current
    script, something which was not necessarily true with previous
    versions of Apache.
However, the "/ralph" information from the
    Alias directive is lost. This is unfortunate, but
    we feel that using the filesystem to pass along this sort of
    information is not a recommended method, and a script making
    use of it "deserves" not to work. Apache 1.2b3 and later,
    however, do provide a workaround.
It may be necessary for a script that was designed for earlier versions of Apache or other servers to need the information that the old PATH_INFO variable provided. For this purpose, Apache 1.2 (1.2b3 and later) sets an additional variable, FILEPATH_INFO. This environment variable contains the value that PATH_INFO would have had with Apache 1.1.1.
A script that wishes to work with both Apache 1.2 and earlier versions can simply test for the existence of FILEPATH_INFO, and use it if available. Otherwise, it can use PATH_INFO. For example, in Perl, one might use:
    $path_info = $ENV{'FILEPATH_INFO'} || $ENV{'PATH_INFO'};
    By doing this, a script can work with all servers supporting the CGI/1.1 specification, including all versions of Apache.