Difference between revisions of "Apache httpd/.htaccess"

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m (.htaccess moved to dot htaccess)
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{{neededit|There's a problem with naming this page just ".htaccess". If that can't be fixed, then all the links need to be fixed.}}
 
[[.htaccess]] is a filename used by the [[Apache]] web server for certain types of configuration. In a multi-user (i.e. shared) web hosting environment, the main Apache configuration files are usually not writable by the user, but .htaccess files live within the public html directory structure (i.e. within the area where a webmaster would need to be able to have full read/write access) and may be created as needed.{{seed}}
 
[[.htaccess]] is a filename used by the [[Apache]] web server for certain types of configuration. In a multi-user (i.e. shared) web hosting environment, the main Apache configuration files are usually not writable by the user, but .htaccess files live within the public html directory structure (i.e. within the area where a webmaster would need to be able to have full read/write access) and may be created as needed.{{seed}}
 
==Reference==
 
==Reference==
 
* [http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/howto/htaccess.html Apache Tutorial: .htaccess files]
 
* [http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/howto/htaccess.html Apache Tutorial: .htaccess files]

Revision as of 18:43, 16 July 2006

This article is in need of editing attention:
There's a problem with naming this page just ".htaccess". If that can't be fixed, then all the links need to be fixed.

.htaccess is a filename used by the Apache web server for certain types of configuration. In a multi-user (i.e. shared) web hosting environment, the main Apache configuration files are usually not writable by the user, but .htaccess files live within the public html directory structure (i.e. within the area where a webmaster would need to be able to have full read/write access) and may be created as needed.

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Reference