Annotation of embedaddon/thttpd/config.h, revision 1.1.1.1
1.1 misho 1: /* config.h - configuration defines for thttpd and libhttpd
2: **
3: ** Copyright © 1995,1998,1999,2000,2001 by Jef Poskanzer <jef@mail.acme.com>.
4: ** All rights reserved.
5: **
6: ** Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
7: ** modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
8: ** are met:
9: ** 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
10: ** notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
11: ** 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
12: ** notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
13: ** documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
14: **
15: ** THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
16: ** ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
17: ** IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
18: ** ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
19: ** FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
20: ** DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
21: ** OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
22: ** HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
23: ** LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
24: ** OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
25: ** SUCH DAMAGE.
26: */
27:
28: #ifndef _CONFIG_H_
29: #define _CONFIG_H_
30:
31:
32: /* The following configuration settings are sorted in order of decreasing
33: ** likelihood that you'd want to change them - most likely first, least
34: ** likely last.
35: **
36: ** In case you're not familiar with the convention, "#ifdef notdef"
37: ** is a Berkeleyism used to indicate temporarily disabled code.
38: ** The idea here is that you re-enable it by just moving it outside
39: ** of the ifdef.
40: */
41:
42: /* CONFIGURE: CGI programs must match this pattern to get executed. It's
43: ** a simple shell-style wildcard pattern, with * meaning any string not
44: ** containing a slash, ** meaning any string at all, and ? meaning any
45: ** single character; or multiple such patterns separated by |. The
46: ** patterns get checked against the filename part of the incoming URL.
47: **
48: ** Restricting CGI programs to a single directory lets the site administrator
49: ** review them for security holes, and is strongly recommended. If there
50: ** are individual users that you trust, you can enable their directories too.
51: **
52: ** You can also specify a CGI pattern on the command line, with the -c flag.
53: ** Such a pattern overrides this compiled-in default.
54: **
55: ** If no CGI pattern is specified, neither here nor on the command line,
56: ** then CGI programs cannot be run at all. If you want to disable CGI
57: ** as a security measure that's how you do it, just don't define any
58: ** pattern here and don't run with the -c flag.
59: */
60: #ifdef notdef
61: /* Some sample patterns. Allow programs only in one central directory: */
62: #define CGI_PATTERN "/cgi-bin/*"
63: /* Allow programs in a central directory, or anywhere in a trusted
64: ** user's tree: */
65: #define CGI_PATTERN "/cgi-bin/*|/jef/**"
66: /* Allow any program ending with a .cgi: */
67: #define CGI_PATTERN "**.cgi"
68: /* When virtual hosting, enable the central directory on every host: */
69: #define CGI_PATTERN "/*/cgi-bin/*"
70: #endif
71:
72: /* CONFIGURE: How many seconds to allow CGI programs to run before killing
73: ** them. This is in case someone writes a CGI program that goes into an
74: ** infinite loop, or does a massive database lookup that would take hours,
75: ** or whatever. If you don't want any limit, comment this out, but that's
76: ** probably a really bad idea.
77: */
78: #define CGI_TIMELIMIT 30
79:
80: /* CONFIGURE: Maximum number of simultaneous CGI programs allowed.
81: ** If this many are already running, then attempts to run more will
82: ** return an HTTP 503 error. If this is not defined then there's
83: ** no limit (and you'd better have a lot of memory). This can also be
84: ** set in the runtime config file.
85: */
86: #ifdef notdef
87: #define CGI_LIMIT 50
88: #endif
89:
90: /* CONFIGURE: How many seconds to allow for reading the initial request
91: ** on a new connection.
92: */
93: #define IDLE_READ_TIMELIMIT 60
94:
95: /* CONFIGURE: How many seconds before an idle connection gets closed.
96: */
97: #define IDLE_SEND_TIMELIMIT 300
98:
99: /* CONFIGURE: The syslog facility to use. Using this you can set up your
100: ** syslog.conf so that all thttpd messages go into a separate file. Note
101: ** that even if you use the -l command line flag to send logging to a
102: ** file, errors still get sent via syslog.
103: */
104: #define LOG_FACILITY LOG_DAEMON
105:
106: /* CONFIGURE: Tilde mapping. Many URLs use ~username to indicate a
107: ** user's home directory. thttpd provides two options for mapping
108: ** this construct to an actual filename.
109: **
110: ** 1) Map ~username to <prefix>/username. This is the recommended choice.
111: ** Each user gets a subdirectory in the main chrootable web tree, and
112: ** the tilde construct points there. The prefix could be something
113: ** like "users", or it could be empty. See also the makeweb program
114: ** for letting users create their own web subdirectories.
115: **
116: ** 2) Map ~username to <user's homedir>/<postfix>. The postfix would be
117: ** the name of a subdirectory off of the user's actual home dir, something
118: ** like "public_html". This is what Apache and other servers do. The problem
119: ** is, you can't do this and chroot() at the same time, so it's inherently
120: ** a security hole. This is strongly dis-recommended, but it's here because
121: ** some people really want it. Use at your own risk.
122: **
123: ** You can also leave both options undefined, and thttpd will not do
124: ** anything special about tildes. Enabling both options is an error.
125: */
126: #ifdef notdef
127: #define TILDE_MAP_1 "users"
128: #define TILDE_MAP_2 "public_html"
129: #endif
130:
131: /* CONFIGURE: The file to use for authentication. If this is defined then
132: ** thttpd checks for this file in the local directory before every fetch.
133: ** If the file exists then authentication is done, otherwise the fetch
134: ** proceeds as usual.
135: **
136: ** If you undefine this then thttpd will not implement authentication
137: ** at all and will not check for auth files, which saves a bit of CPU time.
138: */
139: #define AUTH_FILE ".htpasswd"
140:
141: /* CONFIGURE: The default character set name to use with text MIME types.
142: ** This gets substituted into the MIME types where they have a "%s".
143: **
144: ** You can override this in the config file with the "charset" setting,
145: ** or on the command like with the -T flag.
146: */
147: #define DEFAULT_CHARSET "iso-8859-1"
148:
149:
150: /* Most people won't want to change anything below here. */
151:
152: /* CONFIGURE: This controls the SERVER_NAME environment variable that gets
153: ** passed to CGI programs. By default thttpd does a gethostname(), which
154: ** gives the host's canonical name. If you want to always use some other name
155: ** you can define it here.
156: **
157: ** Alternately, if you want to run the same thttpd binary on multiple
158: ** machines, and want to build in alternate names for some or all of
159: ** them, you can define a list of canonical name to altername name
160: ** mappings. thttpd seatches the list and when it finds a match on
161: ** the canonical name, that alternate name gets used. If no match
162: ** is found, the canonical name gets used.
163: **
164: ** If both SERVER_NAME and SERVER_NAME_LIST are defined here, thttpd searches
165: ** the list as above, and if no match is found then SERVER_NAME gets used.
166: **
167: ** In any case, if thttpd is started with the -h flag, that name always
168: ** gets used.
169: */
170: #ifdef notdef
171: #define SERVER_NAME "your.hostname.here"
172: #define SERVER_NAME_LIST \
173: "canonical.name.here/alternate.name.here", \
174: "canonical.name.two/alternate.name.two"
175: #endif
176:
177: /* CONFIGURE: Undefine this if you want thttpd to hide its specific version
178: ** when returning into to browsers. Instead it'll just say "thttpd" with
179: ** no version.
180: */
181: #define SHOW_SERVER_VERSION
182:
183: /* CONFIGURE: Define this if you want to always chroot(), without having
184: ** to give the -r command line flag. Some people like this as a security
185: ** measure, to prevent inadvertant exposure by accidentally running without -r.
186: ** You can still disable it at runtime with the -nor flag.
187: */
188: #ifdef notdef
189: #define ALWAYS_CHROOT
190: #endif
191:
192: /* CONFIGURE: Define this if you want to always do virtual hosting, without
193: ** having to give the -v command line flag. You can still disable it at
194: ** runtime with the -nov flag.
195: */
196: #ifdef notdef
197: #define ALWAYS_VHOST
198: #endif
199:
200: /* CONFIGURE: If you're using the vhost feature and you have a LOT of
201: ** virtual hostnames (like, hundreds or thousands), you will want to
202: ** enable this feature. It avoids a problem with most Unix filesystems,
203: ** where if there are a whole lot of items in a directory then name lookup
204: ** becomes very slow. This feature makes thttpd use subdirectories
205: ** based on the first characters of each hostname. You can set it to use
206: ** from one to three characters. If the hostname starts with "www.", that
207: ** part is skipped over. Dots are also skipped over, and if the name isn't
208: ** long enough then "_"s are used. Here are some examples of how hostnames
209: ** would get turned into directory paths, for each different setting:
210: ** 1: www.acme.com -> a/www.acme.com
211: ** 1: foobar.acme.com -> f/foobar.acme.com
212: ** 2: www.acme.com -> a/c/www.acme.com
213: ** 2: foobar.acme.com -> f/o/foobar.acme.com
214: ** 3: www.acme.com -> a/c/m/www.acme.com
215: ** 3: foobar.acme.com -> f/o/o/foobar.acme.com
216: ** 3: m.tv -> m/t/v/m.tv
217: ** 4: m.tv -> m/t/v/_/m.tv
218: ** Note that if you compile this setting in but then forget to set up
219: ** the corresponding subdirectories, the only error indication you'll
220: ** get is a "404 Not Found" when you try to visit a site. So be careful.
221: */
222: #ifdef notdef
223: #define VHOST_DIRLEVELS 1
224: #define VHOST_DIRLEVELS 2
225: #define VHOST_DIRLEVELS 3
226: #endif
227:
228: /* CONFIGURE: Define this if you want to always use a global passwd file,
229: ** without having to give the -P command line flag. You can still disable
230: ** it at runtime with the -noP flag.
231: */
232: #ifdef notdef
233: #define ALWAYS_GLOBAL_PASSWD
234: #endif
235:
236: /* CONFIGURE: When started as root, the default username to switch to after
237: ** initializing. If this user (or the one specified by the -u flag) does
238: ** not exist, the program will refuse to run.
239: */
240: #define DEFAULT_USER "nobody"
241:
242: /* CONFIGURE: When started as root, the program can automatically chdir()
243: ** to the home directory of the user specified by -u or DEFAULT_USER.
244: ** An explicit -d still overrides this.
245: */
246: #ifdef notdef
247: #define USE_USER_DIR
248: #endif
249:
250: /* CONFIGURE: If this is defined, some of the built-in error pages will
251: ** have more explicit information about exactly what the problem is.
252: ** Some sysadmins don't like this, for security reasons.
253: */
254: #define EXPLICIT_ERROR_PAGES
255:
256: /* CONFIGURE: Subdirectory for custom error pages. The error filenames are
257: ** $WEBDIR/$ERR_DIR/err%d.html - if virtual hosting is enabled then
258: ** $WEBDIR/hostname/$ERR_DIR/err%d.html is searched first. This allows
259: ** different custom error pages for each virtual hosting web server. If
260: ** no custom page for a given error can be found, the built-in error page
261: ** is generated. If ERR_DIR is not defined at all, only the built-in error
262: ** pages will be generated.
263: */
264: #define ERR_DIR "errors"
265:
266: /* CONFIGURE: Define this if you want a standard HTML tail containing
267: ** $SERVER_SOFTWARE and $SERVER_ADDRESS to be appended to the custom error
268: ** pages. (It is always appended to the built-in error pages.)
269: */
270: #define ERR_APPEND_SERVER_INFO
271:
272: /* CONFIGURE: nice(2) value to use for CGI programs. If this is undefined,
273: ** CGI programs run at normal priority.
274: */
275: #define CGI_NICE 10
276:
277: /* CONFIGURE: $PATH to use for CGI programs.
278: */
279: #define CGI_PATH "/usr/local/bin:/usr/ucb:/bin:/usr/bin"
280:
281: /* CONFIGURE: If defined, $LD_LIBRARY_PATH to use for CGI programs.
282: */
283: #ifdef notdef
284: #define CGI_LD_LIBRARY_PATH "/usr/local/lib:/usr/lib"
285: #endif
286:
287: /* CONFIGURE: How often to run the occasional cleanup job.
288: */
289: #define OCCASIONAL_TIME 120
290:
291: /* CONFIGURE: Seconds between stats syslogs. If this is undefined then
292: ** no stats are accumulated and no stats syslogs are done.
293: */
294: #define STATS_TIME 3600
295:
296: /* CONFIGURE: The mmap cache tries to keep the total number of mapped
297: ** files below this number, so you don't run out of kernel file descriptors.
298: ** If you have reconfigured your kernel to have more descriptors, you can
299: ** raise this and thttpd will keep more maps cached. However it's not
300: ** a hard limit, thttpd will go over it if you really are accessing
301: ** a whole lot of files.
302: */
303: #define DESIRED_MAX_MAPPED_FILES 1000
304:
305: /* CONFIGURE: The mmap cache also tries to keep the total mapped bytes
306: ** below this number, so you don't run out of address space. Again
307: ** it's not a hard limit, thttpd will go over it if you really are
308: ** accessing a bunch of large files.
309: */
310: #define DESIRED_MAX_MAPPED_BYTES 1000000000
311:
312: /* CONFIGURE: Minimum and maximum intervals between child-process reaping,
313: ** in seconds.
314: */
315: #define MIN_REAP_TIME 30
316: #define MAX_REAP_TIME 900
317:
318:
319: /* You almost certainly don't want to change anything below here. */
320:
321: /* CONFIGURE: When throttling CGI programs, we don't know how many bytes
322: ** they send back to the client because it would be inefficient to
323: ** interpose a counter. CGI programs are much more expensive than
324: ** regular files to serve, so we set an arbitrary and high byte count
325: ** that gets applied to all CGI programs for throttling purposes.
326: */
327: #define CGI_BYTECOUNT 25000
328:
329: /* CONFIGURE: The default port to listen on. 80 is the standard HTTP port.
330: */
331: #define DEFAULT_PORT 80
332:
333: /* CONFIGURE: A list of index filenames to check. The files are searched
334: ** for in this order.
335: */
336: #define INDEX_NAMES "index.html", "index.htm", "index.xhtml", "index.xht", "Default.htm", "index.cgi"
337:
338: /* CONFIGURE: If this is defined then thttpd will automatically generate
339: ** index pages for directories that don't have an explicit index file.
340: ** If you want to disable this behavior site-wide, perhaps for security
341: ** reasons, just undefine this. Note that you can disable indexing of
342: ** individual directories by merely doing a "chmod 711" on them - the
343: ** standard Unix file permission to allow file access but disable "ls".
344: */
345: #define GENERATE_INDEXES
346:
347: /* CONFIGURE: Whether to log unknown request headers. Most sites will not
348: ** want to log them, which will save them a bit of CPU time.
349: */
350: #ifdef notdef
351: #define LOG_UNKNOWN_HEADERS
352: #endif
353:
354: /* CONFIGURE: Whether to fflush() the log file after each request. If
355: ** this is turned off there's a slight savings in CPU cycles.
356: */
357: #define FLUSH_LOG_EVERY_TIME
358:
359: /* CONFIGURE: Time between updates of the throttle table's rolling averages. */
360: #define THROTTLE_TIME 2
361:
362: /* CONFIGURE: The listen() backlog queue length. The 1024 doesn't actually
363: ** get used, the kernel uses its maximum allowed value. This is a config
364: ** parameter only in case there's some OS where asking for too high a queue
365: ** length causes an error. Note that on many systems the maximum length is
366: ** way too small - see http://www.acme.com/software/thttpd/notes.html
367: */
368: #define LISTEN_BACKLOG 1024
369:
370: /* CONFIGURE: Maximum number of throttle patterns that any single URL can
371: ** be included in. This has nothing to do with the number of throttle
372: ** patterns that you can define, which is unlimited.
373: */
374: #define MAXTHROTTLENUMS 10
375:
376: /* CONFIGURE: Number of file descriptors to reserve for uses other than
377: ** connections. Currently this is 10, representing one for the listen fd,
378: ** one for dup()ing at connection startup time, one for reading the file,
379: ** one for syslog, and possibly one for the regular log file, which is
380: ** five, plus a factor of two for who knows what.
381: */
382: #define SPARE_FDS 10
383:
384: /* CONFIGURE: How many milliseconds to leave a connection open while doing a
385: ** lingering close.
386: */
387: #define LINGER_TIME 500
388:
389: /* CONFIGURE: Maximum number of symbolic links to follow before
390: ** assuming there's a loop.
391: */
392: #define MAX_LINKS 32
393:
394: /* CONFIGURE: You don't even want to know.
395: */
396: #define MIN_WOULDBLOCK_DELAY 100L
397:
398: #define USE_SENDFILE
399:
400: #endif /* _CONFIG_H_ */
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