forward-dns
provider was added in 2.4.19The authorization providers implemented by .htaccess
files to control access to particular parts of the server.
Access can be controlled based on the client hostname or IP address.
In general, access restriction directives apply to all
access methods (GET
, PUT
,
POST
, etc). This is the desired behavior in most
cases. However, it is possible to restrict some methods, while
leaving other methods unrestricted, by enclosing the directives
in a
Apache's ip
, host
,
forward-dns
and local
.
Other authorization types may also be
used but may require that additional authorization modules be loaded.
These authorization providers affect which hosts can access an area of the server. Access can be controlled by hostname, IP Address, or IP Address range.
Since v2.4.8, expressions are supported within the host require directives.
The ip
provider allows access to the server
to be controlled based on the IP address of the remote client.
When Require ip ip-address
is specified,
then the request is allowed access if the IP address matches.
A full IP address:
An IP address of a host allowed access
A partial IP address:
The first 1 to 3 bytes of an IP address, for subnet restriction.
A network/netmask pair:
A network a.b.c.d, and a netmask w.x.y.z. For more fine-grained subnet restriction.
A network/nnn CIDR specification:
Similar to the previous case, except the netmask consists of nnn high-order 1 bits.
Note that the last three examples above match exactly the same set of hosts.
IPv6 addresses and IPv6 subnets can be specified as shown below:
Note: As the IP addresses are parsed on startup, expressions are not evaluated at request time.
The host
provider allows access to the server
to be controlled based on the host name of the remote client.
When Require host host-name
is specified,
then the request is allowed access if the host name matches.
A (partial) domain-name
Hosts whose names match, or end in, this string are allowed
access. Only complete components are matched, so the above
example will match foo.example.org
but it will not
match fooexample.org
. This configuration will cause
Apache to perform a double reverse DNS lookup on the client IP
address, regardless of the setting of the
The forward-dns
provider allows access to the server
to be controlled based on simple host names. When
Require forward-dns host-name
is specified,
all IP addresses corresponding to host-name
are allowed access.
In contrast to the host
provider, this provider does not
rely on reverse DNS lookups: it simply queries the DNS for the host name
and allows a client if its IP matches. As a consequence, it will only
work with host names, not domain names. However, as the reverse DNS is
not used, it will work with clients which use a dynamic DNS service.
A client the IP of which is resolved from the name
dynamic.example.org
will be granted access.
The forward-dns
provider was added in 2.4.19.
The local
provider allows access to the server if any
of the following conditions is true:
This allows a convenient way to match connections that originate from the local host:
If you are proxying content to your server, you need to be aware
that the client address will be the address of your proxy server,
not the address of the client, and so using the Require
directive in this context may not do what you mean. See