Apache HTTP Server Version 2.0
 
	This document refers to the 2.0 version of Apache httpd, which is no longer maintained. Upgrade, and refer to the current version of httpd instead, documented at:
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The Apache HTTP Server provides a mechanism for storing information in named variables that are called environment variables. This information can be used to control various operations such as logging or access control. The variables are also used as a mechanism to communicate with external programs such as CGI scripts. This document discusses different ways to manipulate and use these variables.
Although these variables are referred to as environment variables, they are not the same as the environment variables controlled by the underlying operating system. Instead, these variables are stored and manipulated in an internal Apache structure. They only become actual operating system environment variables when they are provided to CGI scripts and Server Side Include scripts. If you wish to manipulate the operating system environment under which the server itself runs, you must use the standard environment manipulation mechanisms provided by your operating system shell.
| Related Modules | Related Directives | 
|---|---|
The most basic way to set an environment variable in Apache
				is using the unconditional SetEnv directive. Variables may also be passed from
				the environment of the shell which started the server using the
				PassEnv directive.
			
For additional flexibility, the directives provided by
				mod_setenvif allow environment variables to be set
				on a per-request basis, conditional on characteristics of particular
				requests. For example, a variable could be set only when a
				specific browser (User-Agent) is making a request, or only when
				a specific Referer [sic] header is found. Even more flexibility
				is available through the mod_rewrite's RewriteRule which uses the
				[E=...] option to set environment variables.
			
Finally, mod_unique_id sets the environment variable UNIQUE_ID for each request to a value which is
				guaranteed to be unique across "all" requests under very
				specific conditions.
In addition to all environment variables set within the Apache configuration and passed from the shell, CGI scripts and SSI pages are provided with a set of environment variables containing meta-information about the request as required by the CGI specification.
suexec is used to launch
					CGI scripts, the environment will be cleaned down to a set of
					safe variables before CGI scripts are launched. The
					list of safe variables is defined at compile-time in
					suexec.c.
				SetEnv directive runs
					late during request processing meaning that directives such as
					SetEnvIf and RewriteCond will not see the
					variables set with it.
				| Related Modules | Related Directives | 
|---|---|
One of the primary uses of environment variables is to communicate information to CGI scripts. As discussed above, the environment passed to CGI scripts includes standard meta-information about the request in addition to any variables set within the Apache configuration. For more details, see the CGI tutorial.
Server-parsed (SSI) documents processed by mod_include's
				INCLUDES filter can print environment variables
				using the echo element, and can use environment
				variables in flow control elements to makes parts of a page
				conditional on characteristics of a request. Apache also
				provides SSI pages with the standard CGI environment variables
				as discussed above. For more details, see the SSI tutorial.
			
Access to the server can be controlled based on the value of
				environment variables using the allow from env=
				and deny from env= directives. In combination with
				SetEnvIf, this
				allows for flexible control of access to the server based on
				characteristics of the client. For example, you can use these
				directives to deny access to a particular browser (User-Agent).
			
Environment variables can be logged in the access log using
				the LogFormat
				option %e. In addition, the decision on whether
				or not to log requests can be made based on the status of
				environment variables using the conditional form of the
				CustomLog
				directive. In combination with SetEnvIf this allows for flexible control of which
				requests are logged. For example, you can choose not to log
				requests for filenames ending in gif, or you can
				choose to only log requests from clients which are outside your
				subnet.
			
The Header
				directive can use the presence or
				absence of an environment variable to determine whether or not
				a certain HTTP header will be placed in the response to the
				client. This allows, for example, a certain response header to
				be sent only if a corresponding header is received in the
				request from the client.
External filters configured by mod_ext_filter
				using the ExtFilterDefine directive can
				by activated conditional on an environment variable using the
				disableenv= and enableenv= options.
			
The %{ENV:variable} form of
				TestString in the RewriteCond allows mod_rewrite's rewrite
				engine to make decisions conditional on environment variables.
				Note that the variables accessible in mod_rewrite
				without the ENV: prefix are not actually environment
				variables. Rather, they are variables special to
				mod_rewrite which cannot be accessed from other
				modules.
			
Interoperability problems have led to the introduction of
				mechanisms to modify the way Apache behaves when talking to
				particular clients. To make these mechanisms as flexible as
				possible, they are invoked by defining environment variables,
				typically with BrowserMatch,
				though SetEnv and
				PassEnv could also be used,
				for example.
			
This forces the request to be treated as a HTTP/1.0 request even if it was in a later dialect.
This causes any Vary fields to be removed from
				the response header before it is sent back to the client. Some
				clients don't interpret this field correctly (see the known client
					problems page); setting this variable can work around this
				problem. Setting this variable also implies
				force-response-1.0.
			
This forces an HTTP/1.0 response to clients making an HTTP/1.0 request. It was originally implemented as a result of a problem with AOL's proxies. Some HTTP/1.0 clients may not behave correctly when given an HTTP/1.1 response, and this can be used to interoperate with them.
When set to a value of "1", this variable disables the
				DEFLATE output filter provided by
				mod_deflate for content-types other than
				text/html.
			
When set, the DEFLATE filter of
				mod_deflate will be turned off.
			
This disables KeepAlive
				when set.
This influences mod_negotiation's behaviour. If
				it contains a language tag (such as en, ja
				or x-klingon), mod_negotiation tries
				to deliver a variant with that language. If there's no such variant,
				the normal negotiation process
				applies.
This forces the server to be more careful when sending a redirect to the client. This is typically used when a client has a known problem handling redirects. This was originally implemented as a result of a problem with Microsoft's WebFolders software which has a problem handling redirects on directory resources via DAV methods.
Available in versions after 2.0.54
When Apache issues a redirect in response to a client request, the response includes some actual text to be displayed in case the client can't (or doesn't) automatically follow the redirection. Apache ordinarily labels this text according to the character set which it uses, which is ISO-8859-1.
However, if the redirection is to a page that uses a different character set, some broken browser versions will try to use the character set from the redirection text rather than the actual page. This can result in Greek, for instance, being incorrectly rendered.
Setting this environment variable causes Apache to omit the character set for the redirection text, and these broken browsers will then correctly use that of the destination page.
We recommend that the following lines be included in httpd.conf to deal with known client problems.
# # The following directives modify normal HTTP response behavior. # The first directive disables keepalive for Netscape 2.x and browsers that # spoof it. There are known problems with these browser implementations. # The second directive is for Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0b2 # which has a broken HTTP/1.1 implementation and does not properly # support keepalive when it is used on 301 or 302 (redirect) responses. # BrowserMatch "Mozilla/2" nokeepalive BrowserMatch "MSIE 4\.0b2;" nokeepalive downgrade-1.0 force-response-1.0 # # The following directive disables HTTP/1.1 responses to browsers which # are in violation of the HTTP/1.0 spec by not being able to grok a # basic 1.1 response. # BrowserMatch "RealPlayer 4\.0" force-response-1.0 BrowserMatch "Java/1\.0" force-response-1.0 BrowserMatch "JDK/1\.0" force-response-1.0
This example keeps requests for images from appearing in the access log. It can be easily modified to prevent logging of particular directories, or to prevent logging of requests coming from particular hosts.
						SetEnvIf Request_URI \.gif image-request
						SetEnvIf Request_URI \.jpg image-request
						SetEnvIf Request_URI \.png image-request
						CustomLog logs/access_log common env=!image-request
					
This example shows how to keep people not on your server from using images on your server as inline-images on their pages. This is not a recommended configuration, but it can work in limited circumstances. We assume that all your images are in a directory called /web/images.
						SetEnvIf Referer "^http://www\.example\.com/" local_referal
						# Allow browsers that do not send Referer info
						SetEnvIf Referer "^$" local_referal
						<Directory /web/images>
						
							Order Deny,Allow
							Deny from all
							Allow from env=local_referal
						
						</Directory>
					
For more information about this technique, see the "Keeping Your Images from Adorning Other Sites" tutorial on ServerWatch.