This module implements HTTP Digest Authentication
(RFC2617), and
provides a more secure alternative to
To use MD5 Digest authentication, simply
change the normal AuthType Basic and
AuthType Digest and
Appropriate user (text) files can be created using the
Digest authentication is more secure than Basic authentication, but only works with supporting browsers. As of September 2004, major browsers that support digest authentication include Amaya, Konqueror, MS Internet Explorer for Mac OS X and Windows (although the Windows version fails when used with a query string -- see "Working with MS Internet Explorer" below for a workaround), Mozilla, Netscape 7, Opera, and Safari. lynx does not support digest authentication. Since digest authentication is not as widely implemented as basic authentication, you should use it only in environments where all users will have supporting browsers.
The Digest authentication implementation in previous Internet
Explorer for Windows versions (5 and 6) had issues, namely that
GET requests with a query string were not RFC compliant.
There are a few ways to work around this issue.
The first way is to use POST requests instead of
GET requests to pass data to your program. This method
is the simplest approach if your application can work with this
limitation.
Since version 2.0.51 Apache also provides a workaround in the
AuthDigestEnableQueryStringHack environment variable.
If AuthDigestEnableQueryStringHack is set for the
request, Apache will take steps to work around the MSIE bug and
remove the query string from the digest comparison. Using this
method would look similar to the following.
This workaround is not necessary for MSIE 7, though enabling it does not cause any compatibility issues or significant overhead.
See the
The file provider is implemented
by the
See
The auth will
only do authentication (username/password); auth-int is
authentication plus integrity checking (an MD5 hash of the entity
is also computed and checked); none will cause the module
to use the old RFC-2069 digest algorithm (which does not include
integrity checking). Both auth and auth-int may
be specified, in which the case the browser will choose which of
these to use. none should only be used if the browser for
some reason does not like the challenge it receives otherwise.
auth-int is not implemented yet.
The stale=true. If seconds is
greater than 0 then it specifies the amount of time for which the
nonce is valid; this should probably never be set to less than 10
seconds. If seconds is less than 0 then the nonce never
expires.
The
MD5-sess is not correctly implemented yet.
The
This directive should always be specified and
contain at least the (set of) root URI(s) for this space.
Omitting to do so will cause the client to send the
Authorization header for every request sent to this
server. Apart from increasing the size of the request, it may
also have a detrimental effect on performance if
The URIs specified can also point to different servers, in which case clients (which understand this) will then share username/password info across multiple servers without prompting the user each time.
The 0 and read the error message after trying to start the
server.
The size is normally expressed in Bytes, but you
may follow the number with a K or an M to
express your value as KBytes or MBytes. For example, the following
directives are all equivalent: