Well Gunther, here's the tally; mod_access.c (*) mod_actions.c (*) mod_alias.c (*) mod_asis.c (*) mod_auth.c (*) mod_auth_anon.c (+) mod_auth_db.c (- requires Berkley DB, use mod_auth_dbm) mod_auth_dbm.c (+) mod_auth_digest.c (+) mod_autoindex.c (*) mod_cern_meta.c (+) mod_cgi.c (*) mod_digest.c (+) mod_dir.c (*) mod_env.c (*) mod_example.c (- coding example, not for end users) mod_expires.c (+) mod_headers.c (+) mod_imap.c (*) mod_include.c (*) mod_info.c (+) mod_isapi.c (*) mod_log_agent.c (- use mod_log_config instead) mod_log_config.c (*) mod_log_referer.c (- use mod_log_config instead) mod_mime.c (*) mod_mime_magic.c (+) mod_mmap_static.c (- experimental & not portable) mod_negotiation.c (*) mod_proxy.c (+) mod_rewrite.c (+) mod_setenvif.c (*) mod_so.c (*) mod_speling.c (+) mod_status.c (+) mod_unique_id.c (+) mod_userdir.c (*) mod_usertrack.c (+) mod_vhost_alias.c (+)
(*) built in (+) loadable (-) unported And I'd suggest that, with that, Apache on Win32 is pretty darned complete and sufficient for most users. Bill