In order to assist folks upgrading, we maintain a document
describing information critical to existing Apache HTTP Server users. These
are intended to be brief notes, and you should be able to find
more information in either the New Features document, or in
the src/CHANGES
file. Application and module developers
can find a summary of API changes in the API updates overview.
This document describes changes in server behavior that might require you to change your configuration or how you use the server in order to continue using 2.4 as you are currently using 2.2. To take advantage of new features in 2.4, see the New Features document.
This document describes only the changes from 2.2 to 2.4. If you are upgrading from version 2.0, you should also consult the 2.0 to 2.2 upgrading document.
The compilation process is very similar to the one used in
version 2.2. Your old configure
command line (as
found in build/config.nice
in the installed server
directory) can be used in most cases. There are some changes in
the default settings. Some details of changes:
There have been significant changes in authorization configuration, and other minor configuration changes, that could require changes to your 2.2 configuration files before using them for 2.4.
Any configuration file that uses authorization will likely need changes.
You should review the Authentication, Authorization and Access Control Howto, especially the section Beyond just authorization which explains the new mechanisms for controlling the order in which the authorization directives are applied.
Directives that control how authorization modules respond when they don't match
the authenticated user have been removed: This includes
AuthzLDAPAuthoritative, AuthzDBDAuthoritative, AuthzDBMAuthoritative,
AuthzGroupFileAuthoritative, AuthzUserAuthoritative,
and AuthzOwnerAuthoritative. These directives have been replaced by the
more expressive
If you use Require dbm-group ...
in place
of Require group ...
.
In 2.2, access control based on client hostname, IP address,
and other characteristics of client requests was done using the
directives
In 2.4, such access control is done in the same way as other
authorization checks, using the new module
Mixing old directives like
Here are some examples of old and new ways to do the same access control.
In this example, there is no authentication and all requests are denied.
In this example, there is no authentication and all requests are allowed.
In the following example, there is no authentication and all hosts in the example.org domain are allowed access; all other hosts are denied access.
In the following example, mixing old and new directives leads to unexpected results.
Why httpd denies access to servers-status even if the configuration seems to allow it?
Because
This example conversely works as expected:
So even if mixing configuration is still possible, please try to avoid it when upgrading: either keep old directives and then migrate to the new ones on a later stage or just migrate everything in bulk.
In many configurations with authentication, where the value of the
In configurations where both authentication and access control were meaningfully combined, the access control directives should be migrated. This example allows requests meeting both criteria:
In configurations where both authentication and access control were meaningfully combined, the access control directives should be migrated. This example allows requests meeting either criteria:
Some other small adjustments may be necessary for particular configurations as discussed below.
none
. You need to use other configuration
settings to replace it in 2.4.
None
.On
or Off
.
Previously, any value other than "Off" or "0" was treated as
"On".sessionid
to match
/someapplication/image.gif;jsessionid=123456789
,
then you will need to change to the full string
jsessionid
.
#if expr
element now uses the new expression parser. The old syntax can be
restored with the new directive DebugLevel
option has been removed in favour of per-module DebugLevel
option has been removed in favour of per-module PATH_INFO
has changed from httpd 2.2, and
some web applications will no longer operate properly with
the new PATH_INFO
setting. The previous setting
can be restored by configuring the proxy-scgi-pathinfo
variable.trace7
./bin/sh -c
in 2.2 and earlier. In 2.4 and later,
piped logging commands are executed directly. To restore the
old behaviour, see the piped logging
documentation.*_DN
variables has changed. The old format can still be used with the new
LegacyDNStringFormat
argument to #if expr=
element or the directive
mod_authn_alias
in previous versions (i.e., the All modules must be recompiled for 2.4 before being loaded.
Many third-party modules designed for version 2.2 will otherwise work unchanged with the Apache HTTP Server version 2.4. Some will require changes; see the API update overview.
Invalid command 'User', perhaps misspelled or defined by a module not included in the server configuration
- load module Invalid command 'Require', perhaps misspelled or defined by a module not included in the server configuration
, or
Invalid command 'Order', perhaps misspelled or defined by a module not included in the server configuration
- load module Ignoring deprecated use of DefaultType in line NN of /path/to/httpd.conf
- remove Invalid command 'AddOutputFilterByType', perhaps misspelled
or defined by a module not included in the server configuration
- configuration error: couldn't check user: /path
-
load module .htaccess
files aren't being processed - Check for an
appropriate None
in 2.4.