ls
command or the
Win32 dir
shell commandThe index of a directory can come from one of two sources:
index.html
. The The two functions are separated so that you can completely remove (or replace) automatic index generation should you want to.
Automatic index generation is enabled with using
Options +Indexes
. See the
If the FancyIndexing
option is given with the SuppressColumnSorting
option.
Note that when the display is sorted by "Size", it's the actual size of the files that's used, not the displayed value - so a 1010-byte file will always be displayed before a 1011-byte file (if in ascending order) even though they both are shown as "1K".
Apache 2.0.23 reorganized the Query Arguments for Column
Sorting, and introduced an entire group of new query options.
To effectively eliminate all client control over the output,
the IndexOptions
IgnoreClient
option was introduced.
The column sorting headers themselves are self-referencing hyperlinks that add the sort query options shown below. Any option below may be added to any request for the directory resource.
C=N
sorts the directory by file nameC=M
sorts the directory by last-modified
date, then file nameC=S
sorts the directory by size, then file
nameC=D
sorts the directory by description, then
file nameO=A
sorts the listing in Ascending
OrderO=D
sorts the listing in Descending
OrderF=0
formats the listing as a simple list
(not FancyIndexed)F=1
formats the listing as a FancyIndexed
listF=2
formats the listing as an
HTMLTable FancyIndexed listV=0
disables version sortingV=1
enables version sortingP=pattern
lists only files matching
the given patternNote that the 'P'attern query argument is tested
after the usual
The simple example below, which can be clipped and saved in a header.html file, illustrates these query options. Note that the unknown "X" argument, for the submit button, is listed last to assure the arguments are all parsed before mod_autoindex encounters the X=Go input.
FancyIndexing
.
File is a file extension, partial filename, wild-card
expression or full filename for files to describe.
If String contains any whitespace, you have to enclose it
in quotes ("
or '
). This alternate text
is displayed if the client is image-incapable, has image loading
disabled, or fails to retrieve the icon.
FancyIndexing
.
MIME-encoding is a valid content-encoding, such as
x-compress
. If String contains any whitespace,
you have to enclose it in quotes ("
or '
).
This alternate text is displayed if the client is image-incapable,
has image loading disabled, or fails to retrieve the icon.
FancyIndexing
.
MIME-type is a valid content-type, such as
text/html
. If String contains any whitespace,
you have to enclose it in quotes ("
or '
).
This alternate text is displayed if the client is image-incapable,
has image loading disabled, or fails to retrieve the icon.
This sets the description to display for a file, for
FancyIndexing
.
File is a file extension, partial filename, wild-card
expression or full filename for files to describe.
String is enclosed in double quotes ("
).
The typical, default description field is 23 bytes wide. 6
more bytes are added by the IndexOptions SuppressIcon
option, 7 bytes are
added by the IndexOptions SuppressSize
option, and 19 bytes are
added by the IndexOptions SuppressLastModified
option.
Therefore, the widest default the description column is ever
assigned is 55 bytes.
See the DescriptionWidth
Descriptive text defined with
This sets the icon to display next to a file ending in
name for FancyIndexing
. Icon is either a (%-escaped)
relative URL to the icon, or of the format
(alttext,url)
where alttext
is the text tag given for an icon for non-graphical browsers.
Name is either ^^DIRECTORY^^
for directories,
^^BLANKICON^^
for blank lines (to format the list
correctly), a file extension, a wildcard expression, a partial
filename or a complete filename.
This sets the icon to display next to files with FancyIndexing
.
Icon is either a (%-escaped) relative URL to the icon,
or of the format (alttext,url)
where alttext is the text tag given for an icon for
non-graphical browsers.
MIME-encoding is a wildcard expression matching required the content-encoding.
This sets the icon to display next to files of type
MIME-type for FancyIndexing
.
Icon is either a (%-escaped) relative URL to the icon,
or of the format (alttext,url)
where alttext is the text tag given for an icon for
non-graphical browsers.
MIME-type is a wildcard expression matching required the mime types.
The FancyIndexing
.
Url-path is a (%-escaped) relative URL to the icon.
The
Both HeaderName and
Filename must resolve to a document with a major
content type of text/*
(e.g.,
text/html
, text/plain
, etc.). This means
that filename may refer to a CGI script if the script's
actual file type (as opposed to its output) is marked as
text/html
such as with a directive like:
Content negotiation
will be performed if MultiViews
is in effect. If filename resolves
to a static text/html
document (not a CGI script) and
either one of the Includes
or IncludesNOEXEC
is enabled,
the file will be processed for server-side includes (see the
If the file specified by IndexOptions
+SuppressHTMLPreamble
, so that these tags are not
repeated.
The .
(the current
directory).
The
DescriptionWidth
keyword allows you to
specify the width of the description column in
characters.-DescriptionWidth
(or unset) allows
DescriptionWidth=n
fixes the column width to
n bytes wide.DescriptionWidth=*
grows the column to the
width necessary to accommodate the longest description
string.FoldersFirst
is enabled, subdirectory
Zed
will be listed before subdirectory
Beta
, which will be listed before normal files
Gamma
and Alpha
. This option
only has an effect if FancyIndexing
is also enabled.height
and width
attributes in the img
tag for the file icon. This allows
browser to precalculate the page layout without having to wait until
all the images have been loaded. If no value is given for the option,
it defaults to the standard height of the icons supplied with the Apache
software.IconHeight
,
will cause the server to include height
and
width
attributes in the img
tag for
the file icon. This allows browser to precalculate the page
layout without having to wait until all the images have been
loaded. If no value is given for the option, it defaults to
the standard width of the icons supplied with the Apache
software.SuppressColumnSorting
.)NameWidth
keyword allows you to specify the width
of the filename column in bytes.-NameWidth
(or unset) allows NameWidth=n
fixes the column width to
n bytes wide.NameWidth=*
grows the column to the necessary
width.title
element. This is CPU and disk intensive.DescriptionWidth
index option to limit the size of the description column.<html>
,
<head>
, et cetera). The
SuppressHTMLPreamble
option disables this behaviour,
causing the module to start the display with the header file
contents. The header file must contain appropriate HTML instructions
in this case. If there is no header file, the preamble is generated
as usual.SuppressIcon
and
SuppressRules
yields proper HTML 3.2 output, which
by the final specification prohibits img
and
hr
elements from the pre
block (used to
format FancyIndexed listings.)hr
elements) in directory listings. Combining both SuppressIcon
and
SuppressRules
yields proper HTML 3.2 output, which
by the final specification prohibits img
and
hr
elements from the pre
block (used to
format FancyIndexed listings.)HEAD
request. Note some operating systems correctly track new and
removed files, but do not track changes for sizes or dates of
the files within the directory. Changes to the size
or date stamp of an existing file will not update the
Last-Modified header on all Unix platforms. If this
is a concern, leave this option disabled.VersionSort
keyword causes files containing
version numbers to sort in a natural way. Strings are sorted as
usual, except that substrings of digits in the name and
description are compared according to their numeric value.
If the number starts with a zero, then it is considered to be a fraction:
XHTML
keyword forces Apache 1.3.3 introduced some significant changes in the
handling of
will be the equivalent of
+
or -
).Whenever a '+' or '-' prefixed keyword is encountered, it
is applied to the current
The net effect is equivalent to IndexOptions FancyIndexing
+SuppressSize
, because the unprefixed FancyIndexing
discarded the incremental keywords before it, but allowed them to
start accumulating again afterward.
To unconditionally set the +
or -
prefixes.
The FancyIndexing
index option. By default, fancyindexed
directory listings are displayed in ascending order by filename; the
Ascending
or
Descending
, indicating the direction of the sort.
The second argument must be one of the keywords Name
,
Date
, Size
, or Description
,
and identifies the primary key. The secondary key is
always the ascending filename.
You can force a directory listing to only be displayed in a
particular order by combining this directive with the SuppressColumnSorting
index option; this will prevent
the client from requesting the directory listing in a different
order.
The
The
See also