src
into
src/main
src
have moved
to src/modules/standard
support
directory is now in src/support
src/include/compat.h
both for the list of renamed symbol
names and for a way to get source backward compatibility in existing
third-party module sources.
src/os
directory.
Currently this contains information for unix, OS/2 and Windows 32
platforms.
Configuration
syntax has been simplified for adding new
modules. Users no longer need to enter the module's structure name.
In addition, new modules can be located anywhere on the
file system, or typically in new or existing directories under
src/modules
.
Configure
, such as additional libraries
required.
Configure
.
configure
replaced the old top-level Makefile
and src/helpers/InstallApache
stuff.
src/Configuration
then running Configure
and
make
. In earlier version of Apache before 1.3, the
line added to Configuration looked like this:
Module status_module mod_status.oFrom 1.3 onwards, the
AddModule
line should be used
instead, and typically looks like this:
AddModule modules/standard/mod_status.oThe argument to AddModule is the path, relative to
src
, to
the module file's source or object file.
Normally when adding a module you should follow the instructions of the module author. However if the module comes as a single source file, say mod_foo.c, then the recommended way to add the module to Apache is as follows:
mod_foo.c
into the directory
src/modules/extra
src
directory and add the following line
to Configuration
AddModule modules/extra/mod_foo.o
./Configure
make
src
directory, and if the module required any additional
compilation options (such as libraries) they would have to be added
to Configuration
. Also the user would have to be
told the module's structure name to add on the Module line
of Configuration
.
From Apache 1.3 onwards, module authors can make use of these new features:
Configuration
command AddModule which only
requires a path to the module source or object file
src/modules
is recommended.
apxs
support tool can be
used to compile the module into a dynamic
shared object (DSO), install it into the existing Apache
installation and optionally activating it in the Apache
httpd.conf
file. The only requirement is that
Apache has DSO-support for the used platform and the module
mod_so
was built into
the server binary httpd
.
src/modules
directory of their Apache source
tree. This will create a new directory
src/modules/mod_demo
. Then they need to add the following
line to the Configuration
file:
AddModule modules/mod_demo/mod_demo.othen run
Configure
and make
as normal.
The mod_demo/Makefile.tmpl
should contain the dependencies
of the module source. For example, a simple module which just interfaces to
some standard Apache module API functions might look this this:
mod_demo.o: mod_demo.c $(INCDIR)/httpd.h $(INCDIR)/http_protocol.hWhen the user runs
Configure
Apache will create a full
makefile to build this module. If this module also requires
some additional built-time options to be given, such as libraries,
see the next section.
If the module also comes with header files, these can be added to the
archive. If the module consists of multiple source files it can be
built into a library file using a supplied makefile. In this case,
distribute the makefile as mod_demo/Makefile
and do
not include a mod_demo/Makefile.tmpl
. If
Configure
sees a Makefile.tmpl
it assumes it
is safe to overwrite any existing Makefile
.
See the Apache src/modules/standard
for an example of a
module directory where the makefile is created automatically from a
Makefile.tmpl file (note that this directory also shows how to
distribute multiple modules in a single directory). See
src/modules/proxy
and src/modules/example
for examples of modules built using custom makefiles (to build a
library and an object file, respectively).
Configure
to add compile-time
options such as additional libraries. For example, if mod_demo in the
example above also requires that Apache be linked against a DBM
library, then the following text could be inserted into the mod_demo.c
source:
/* * Module definition information - the part between the -START and -END * lines below is used by Configure. This could be stored in a separate * instead. * * MODULE-DEFINITION-START * Name: demo_module * ConfigStart LIBS="$LIBS $DBM_LIB" if [ "X$DBM_LIB" != "X" ]; then echo " + using $DBM_LIB for mod_demo" fi * ConfigEnd * MODULE-DEFINITION-END */Note that this is contained inside a C language comment to hide it from the compiler. Anything between the lines which contains
MODULE-DEFINITION-START
and
MODULE-DEFINITION-END
is used by Configure
.
The Name:
line gives the module's structure name. This is
not really necessary in this case since if not present
Configure
will guess at a name based on the filename
(e.g., given "mod_demo" it will remove the leading "mod_" and append
"_module" to get a structure name. This works with all modules
distributed with Apache).
The lines between ConfigStart
and ConfigEnd
as executed by Configure
and can be used to add
compile-time options and libraries. In this case it adds the DBM
library (from $DBM_LIB) to the standard compilation libraries ($LIB)
and displays a message.
See the default distribution's mod_auth_dbm.c for an example of an embedded module definition.
.module
extension. So, for example, if
the distributed module object file is mod_demo.o, the module
definition file should be called mod_demo.module. It contains the same
information as above, but does not need to be inside a C comment or
delimited with MODULE-DEFINITION-START
etc. For example:
Name: demo_module ConfigStart LIBS="$LIBS $DBM_LIB" if [ "X$DBM_LIB" != "X" ]; then echo " + using $DBM_LIB for mod_demo" fi ConfigEndSee the default distribution's mod_auth_db.module for an example of a separate module definition file.