Joseph S D Yao wrote:
I understand that the argument to the Proxy directive is supposed to be
a shell-style wildcard (rather than a simple prefix match), as the
argument to the ProxyMatch directive is supposed to be a Perl-style
regular expression.
Ok. So a shell style wildcard never hits on a path delimiter, right?
That depends on what "shell-style wildcard" means in a given
implementation. I have seen ones where the path delimiter is not a
special character. As the '/' is (a) not solely a path delimiter and
(b) not the unique path delimiter, in a URL, I had not expected that to
be a special character here.
Shell wildcards are sensitive to path delimiters; read RFC 2616 and its
cited RFC's; "/" are path delimiters, End of discussion.
In fact, noting that a "*" will match
"http://www.example.com/dir1/dir2/dir3/page.html", I rather suspect that
it is not.
It will.
<Proxy http://*.tuxedo.org*>
Perhaps you meant http://*.tuxedo.org/*
But the trailing * is redundant. drop it all together.
Yours does not accept the common usage, "http://www.tuxedo.org", with no
trailing '/'. Most Web servers will accept and correct this.
No; they don't - your browser did. But that correction is prior to httpd
handling the request. "/" is the minimal path, see the RFC.
It is not clear to me that the "*" is redundant. Without it, don't I
restrict myself to the home page?
No
All examples I have seen used with
<Proxy> that are not using "*" end in '*'.
Who suggested random configurations you discover from google are any good?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project.
See <URL:http://httpd.apache.org/userslist.html> for more info.
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
" from the digest: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]