> From: Graham Leggett [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> The standard way of setting what is allowed and what is not allowed in > an URL space is via Options. If proxy has its own directive, but > everything else uses options, it's confusing and inconsistent. Yes, it is confusing and inconsistent, but that is what we have already. I think you'll find if you look through the directives that there are many things that could be controlled by Options, but aren't. Options is basically just a hold-over from NCSA. > If options are too hard to use that is a separate problem. Well, sure. But in my opinion, the only way to fix options is to split it out: Includes On|Off|NoExec ExecCGI On|Off etc... If you have other ideas.... The only advantage that Options has is the ability to do <Directory /path> Options None </Directory> and turn off everything in one shot. But I think that is far outweighed by all the misconfigurations that it causes. Joshua.
