Custom Error Responses
Additional functionality allows webmasters to configure the response
of Apache to some error or problem.
Customizable responses can be defined to be activated in the event of
a server detected error or problem.
If a script crashes and produces a "500 Server Error" response,
then this response can be replaced with either some friendlier text or by
a redirection to another URL (local or external).
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Old Behavior
NCSA httpd 1.3 would return some boring old error/problem message
which would often be meaningless to the user, and would provide no
means of logging the symptoms which caused it.
New Behavior
The server can be asked to:
- Display some other text, instead of the NCSA hard coded
messages, or
- redirect to a local URL, or
- redirect to an external URL.
Redirecting to another URL can be useful, but only if some
information can be passed which can then be used to explain and/or log
the error/problem more clearly.
To achieve this, Apache will define new CGI-like environment
variables:
REDIRECT_HTTP_ACCEPT=*/*, image/gif, image/x-xbitmap,
image/jpeg
REDIRECT_HTTP_USER_AGENT=Mozilla/1.1b2 (X11; I; HP-UX A.09.05
9000/712)
REDIRECT_PATH=.:/bin:/usr/local/bin:/etc
REDIRECT_QUERY_STRING=
REDIRECT_REMOTE_ADDR=121.345.78.123
REDIRECT_REMOTE_HOST=ooh.ahhh.com
REDIRECT_SERVER_NAME=crash.bang.edu
REDIRECT_SERVER_PORT=80
REDIRECT_SERVER_SOFTWARE=Apache/0.8.15
REDIRECT_URL=/cgi-bin/buggy.pl
Note the REDIRECT_
prefix.
At least REDIRECT_URL
and
REDIRECT_QUERY_STRING
will be passed to the
new URL (assuming it's a cgi-script or a cgi-include). The
other variables will exist only if they existed prior to
the error/problem. None of these will be
set if your ErrorDocument
is an
external redirect (anything starting with a
scheme name like http:
, even if it refers to the same host
as the server).
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Use of ErrorDocument
is enabled
for .htaccess files when the
AllowOverride
is set accordingly.
Here are some examples...
ErrorDocument 500 /cgi-bin/crash-recover
ErrorDocument 500 "Sorry, our script crashed. Oh dear"
ErrorDocument 500 http://xxx/
ErrorDocument 404 /Lame_excuses/not_found.html
ErrorDocument 401 /Subscription/how_to_subscribe.html
The syntax is,
ErrorDocument <3-digit-code> <action>
where the action can be,
- Text to be displayed. Prefix the text with a quote
("). Whatever follows the quote is displayed. Note:
the (") prefix isn't displayed.
- An external URL to redirect to.
- A local URL to redirect to.
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Apache's behavior to redirected URLs has been modified so
that additional environment variables are available to a
script/server-include.
Old behavior
Standard CGI vars were made available to a script which
has been redirected to. No indication of where the
redirection came from was provided.
New behavior
A new batch of environment variables will be initialized
for use by a script which has been redirected to. Each new
variable will have the prefix REDIRECT_
.
REDIRECT_
environment variables are created from
the CGI environment variables which existed prior to the
redirect, they are renamed with a REDIRECT_
prefix, i.e., HTTP_USER_AGENT
becomes
REDIRECT_HTTP_USER_AGENT
. In addition to these
new variables, Apache will define REDIRECT_URL
and REDIRECT_STATUS
to help the script trace its
origin. Both the original URL and the URL being redirected to
can be logged in the access log.
If the ErrorDocument specifies a local redirect to a CGI
script, the script should include a "Status:
"
header field in its output in order to ensure the propagation
all the way back to the client of the error condition that
caused it to be invoked. For instance, a Perl ErrorDocument
script might include the following:
...
print "Content-type: text/html\n";
printf "Status: %s Condition Intercepted\n", $ENV{"REDIRECT_STATUS"};
...
If the script is dedicated to handling a particular error
condition, such as 404 Not Found
, it can
use the specific code and error text instead.
Note that the script must emit an appropriate
Status:
header (such as 302 Found
), if the
response contains a Location:
header (in order to issue a
client side redirect). Otherwise the Location:
header may
have no effect.