mod_asis.c
file, and
is compiled in by default. It provides for .asis
files. Any
document with mime type httpd/send-as-is
will be processed by
this module.
This can be used to send any kind of data from the server, including redirects and other special HTTP responses, without requiring a cgi-script or an nph script.
httpd/send-as-is
e.g.
AddType httpd/send-as-is asis
this defines the .asis
file extension as being of the new
httpd/send-as-is
mime type. The contents of any file with a
.asis
extension will then be sent by Apache to the client with
almost no changes. Clients will need HTTP headers to be attached, so do not
forget them. A Status: header is also required; the data should be the
3-digit HTTP response code, followed by a textual message.Here's an example of a file whose contents are sent as is so as to tell the client that a file has redirected.
Status: 301 Now where did I leave that URL
Location: http://xyz.abc.com/foo/bar.html
Content-type: text/html
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>Lame excuses'R'us</TITLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY>
<H1>Fred's exceptionally wonderful page has moved to
<A HREF="http://xyz.abc.com/foo/bar.html">Joe's</A> site.
</H1>
</BODY>
</HTML>
Notes: the server always adds a Date: and Server: header to the data returned
to the client, so these should not be included in the file.
The server does not add a Last-Modified header; it probably should.