Apache HTTP Server Version 2.0

| Description: | Provides for content negotiation | 
|---|---|
| Status: | Base | 
| Module Identifier: | negotiation_module | 
| Source File: | mod_negotiation.c | 
Content negotiation, or more accurately content selection, is the selection of the document that best matches the clients capabilities, from one of several available documents. There are two implementations of this.
type-map) which explicitly lists the files
      containing the variants.Options, where the server does an
      implicit filename pattern match, and choose from amongst the
      results.A type map has the same format as RFC822 mail headers. It contains document descriptions separated by blank lines, with lines beginning with a hash character ('#') treated as comments. A document description consists of several header records; records may be continued on multiple lines if the continuation lines start with spaces. The leading space will be deleted and the lines concatenated. A header record consists of a keyword name, which always ends in a colon, followed by a value. Whitespace is allowed between the header name and value, and between the tokens of value. The headers allowed are:
AddEncoding directive.
      This normally includes the encodings x-compress
      for compress'd files, and x-gzip for gzip'd
      files. The x- prefix is ignored for encoding
      comparisons.en,
      meaning English.name=value. Common parameters include: 
        text/html this defaults to 2, otherwise
          0.Content-Type: image/jpeg; qs=0.8
New in Apache 2.0, the actual content of the resource may be included in the type-map file using the Body header. This header must contain a string that designates a delimiter for the body content. Then all following lines in the type map file will be considered part of the resource body until the delimiter string is found.
Example:
Body:----xyz----
<html>
<body>
<p>Content of the page.</p>
</body>
</html>
----xyz----
A MultiViews search is enabled by the MultiViews Options. If the server receives a
    request for /some/dir/foo and
    /some/dir/foo does not exist, then the
    server reads the directory looking for all files named
    foo.*, and effectively fakes up a type map which
    names all those files, assigning them the same media types and
    content-encodings it would have if the client had asked for one
    of them by name. It then chooses the best match to the client's
    requirements, and returns that document.
| Description: | Allows content-negotiated documents to be cached by proxy servers | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | CacheNegotiatedDocs on|off | 
| Default: | CacheNegotiatedDocs off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Base | 
| Module: | mod_negotiation | 
| Compatibility: | The syntax changed in version 2.0. | 
If set, this directive allows content-negotiated documents to be cached by proxy servers. This could mean that clients behind those proxys could retrieve versions of the documents that are not the best match for their abilities, but it will make caching more efficient.
This directive only applies to requests which come from HTTP/1.0 browsers. HTTP/1.1 provides much better control over the caching of negotiated documents, and this directive has no effect in responses to HTTP/1.1 requests.
Prior to version 2.0,
    CacheNegotiatedDocs did not take an
    argument; it was turned on by the presence of the directive by
    itself.
| Description: | Action to take if a single acceptable document is not found | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ForceLanguagePriority None|Prefer|Fallback [Prefer|Fallback] | 
| Default: | ForceLanguagePriority Prefer | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | FileInfo | 
| Status: | Base | 
| Module: | mod_negotiation | 
| Compatibility: | Available in version 2.0.30 and later | 
The ForceLanguagePriority directive uses
    the given LanguagePriority to satisfy
    negotation where the server could otherwise not return a single
    matching document.
ForceLanguagePriority Prefer uses
    LanguagePriority to serve a one valid result, rather
    than returning an HTTP result 300 (MULTIPLE CHOICES) when there
    are several equally valid choices.  If the directives below were
    given, and the user's Accept-Language header assigned en and de
    each as quality .500 (equally acceptable) then the first matching
    variant, en, will be served.
      LanguagePriority en fr de
      ForceLanguagePriority Prefer
ForceLanguagePriority Fallback uses
    LanguagePriority to serve a valid result, rather than
    returning an HTTP result 406 (NOT ACCEPTABLE).  If the directives
    below were given, and the user's Accept-Language only permitted an
    es language response, but such a variant isn't found, then the
    first variant from the LanguagePriority list below will be
    served.
      LanguagePriority en fr de
      ForceLanguagePriority Fallback
Both options, Prefer and Fallback, may be specified, so either the first matching variant from LanguagePriority will be served if more that one variant is acceptable, or first available document will be served if none of the variants matched the client's acceptable list of languages.
| Description: | The precendence of language variants for cases where the client does not express a preference | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | LanguagePriority MIME-lang [MIME-lang] ... | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | FileInfo | 
| Status: | Base | 
| Module: | mod_negotiation | 
The LanguagePriority sets the precedence
    of language variants for the case where the client does not
    express a preference, when handling a MultiViews request. The list
    of MIME-lang are in order of decreasing preference.
    Example:
LanguagePriority en fr de
For a request for foo.html, where
    foo.html.fr and foo.html.de both
    existed, but the browser did not express a language preference,
    then foo.html.fr would be returned.
Note that this directive only has an effect if a 'best'
    language cannot be determined by any other means or the ForceLanguagePriority directive
    is not None. Correctly implemented HTTP/1.1 requests
    will mean this directive has no effect.