This module provides directives to control and modify HTTP request and response headers. Headers can be merged, replaced or removed.
The directives provided by
Order of processing is important and is affected both by the order in the configuration file and by placement in configuration sections. These two directives have a different effect if reversed:
This way round, the MirrorID
header is not set. If
reversed, the MirrorID header is set to "mirror 12".
Early mode is designed as a test/debugging aid for developers.
Directives defined using the early
keyword are set
right at the beginning of processing the request. This means
they can be used to simulate different requests and set up test
cases, but it also means that headers may be changed at any time
by other modules before generating a Response.
Because early directives are processed before the request path's
configuration is traversed, early headers can only be set in a
main server or virtual host context. Early directives cannot depend
on a request path, so they will fail in contexts such as
MyHeader
, to the response including a
timestamp for when the request was received and how long it
took to begin serving the request. This header can be used by
the client to intuit load on the server or in isolating
bottlenecks between the client and the server.
results in this header being added to the response:
results in this header being added to the response:
MyHeader
on the response if and
only if header MyRequestHeader
is present on the request.
This is useful for constructing headers in response to some client
stimulus. Note that this example requires the services of the
If the header MyRequestHeader: myvalue
is present on
the HTTP request, the response will contain the following header:
CGI
, NO_CACHE
and
NO_STORE
environment variables all existed for the
request):
then the response would contain the following header:
If append
was used instead of merge
,
then the response would contain the following header:
This directive can replace, merge, change or remove HTTP request headers. The header is modified just before the content handler is run, allowing incoming headers to be modified. The action it performs is determined by the first argument. This can be one of the following values:
add
set
,
append
or merge
should be used instead.append
edit
edit*
edit
form will match and replace exactly once
in a header value, whereas the edit*
form will replace
every instance of the search pattern if it appears more
than once.merge
set
setifempty
unset
This argument is followed by a header name, which can
include the final colon, but it is not required. Case is
ignored. For set
, append
, merge
and
add
a value is given as the third argument. If a
value contains spaces, it should be surrounded by double
quotes. For unset
, no value should be given.
value may be a character string, a string containing format
specifiers or a combination of both. The supported format specifiers
are the same as for the edit
both
a value and a replacement are required, and are
a
The
early
env=[!]varname
varname
exists.
A !
in front of varname
reverses the test,
so the directive applies only if varname
is unset.expr=expression
Except in early mode, the
This directive can replace, merge or remove HTTP response headers. The header is modified just after the content handler and output filters are run, allowing outgoing headers to be modified.
The optional condition argument determines which internal
table of responses headers this directive will operate against. Despite the
name, the default value of onsuccess
does not limit
an action to responses with a 2xx status code. Headers set under
this condition are still used when, for example, a request is successfully
proxied or generated by CGI, even when they have generated a failing status code.
When your action is a function of an existing header, you may need to specify
a condition of always
, depending on which internal table the
original header was set in. The table that corresponds to always
is
used for locally generated error responses as well as successful responses.
Note also that repeating this directive with both conditions makes sense in
some scenarios because always
is not a superset of
onsuccess
with respect to existing headers:
always
is used in the ultimate response.always
and not in the default table.onsuccess
condition.Separately from the condition parameter described above, you can limit an action based on HTTP status codes for e.g. proxied or CGI requests. See the example that uses %{REQUEST_STATUS} in the section above.
The action it performs is determined by the first argument (second argument if a condition is specified). This can be one of the following values:
add
set
,
append
or merge
should be used instead.append
echo
edit
edit*
edit
form will match and replace exactly once
in a header value, whereas the edit*
form will replace
every instance of the search pattern if it appears more
than once.merge
set
setifempty
unset
note
This argument is followed by a header name, which
can include the final colon, but it is not required. Case is
ignored for set
, append
, merge
,
add
, unset
and edit
.
The header name for echo
is case sensitive and may be a
For set
, append
, merge
and
add
a value is specified as the next argument.
If value
contains spaces, it should be surrounded by double quotes.
value may be a character string, a string containing
The following format specifiers are supported in value:
Format | Description |
---|---|
%% |
The percent sign |
%t |
The time the request was received in Universal Coordinated Time
since the epoch (Jan. 1, 1970) measured in microseconds. The value
is preceded by t= . |
%D |
The time from when the request was received to the time the
headers are sent on the wire. This is a measure of the duration
of the request. The value is preceded by D= .
The value is measured in microseconds. |
%l |
The current load averages of the actual server itself. It is
designed to expose the values obtained by getloadavg()
and this represents the current load average, the 5 minute average, and
the 15 minute average. The value is preceded by l= with each
average separated by / .Available in 2.4.4 and later. |
%i |
The current idle percentage of httpd (0 to 100) based on available
processes and threads. The value is preceded by i= .Available in 2.4.4 and later. |
%b |
The current busy percentage of httpd (0 to 100) based on available
processes and threads. The value is preceded by b= .Available in 2.4.4 and later. |
%{VARNAME}e |
The contents of the environment
variable VARNAME . |
%{VARNAME}s |
The contents of the SSL environment
variable VARNAME , if |
The %s
format specifier is only available in
Apache 2.1 and later; it can be used instead of %e
to avoid the overhead of enabling SSLOptions
+StdEnvVars
. If SSLOptions +StdEnvVars
must
be enabled anyway for some other reason, %e
will be
more efficient than %s
.
When the value parameter uses the ap_expr parser, some expression syntax will differ from examples that evaluate boolean expressions such as <If>:
For edit
there is both a value argument
which is a
The
early
env=[!]varname
varname
exists.
A !
in front of varname
reverses the test,
so the directive applies only if varname
is unset.expr=expression
Except in early mode, the