Re: migrate .htaccess conent to httpd.conf

2017-10-05 Thread Markus Rosjat
Hi, Am 05.10.2017 um 12:53 schrieb Michael Hekeler: I don't need them I have them on a older system were apache 1.3 was the standard webserver for openbsd still. So I simply want to migrate the content to a system with a new standard webserver httpd. Okay But keep in mind that httpd is not

Re: migrate .htaccess conent to httpd.conf

2017-10-05 Thread Michael Hekeler
> I don't need them I have them on a older system were apache 1.3 was > the standard webserver for openbsd still. So I simply want to > migrate the content to a system with a new standard webserver httpd. Okay But keep in mind that httpd is not Apache and converting complicated htaccess stuff is

Re: migrate .htaccess conent to httpd.conf

2017-10-05 Thread Markus Rosjat
Hi, Am 05.10.2017 um 10:11 schrieb Michael Hekeler: And 2nd question would be how to give the user a way to implement something like it on there own? I was thinking of a simply standard include in the server definition but this might mess things up if you need directory specific and user

Re: migrate .htaccess conent to httpd.conf

2017-10-05 Thread Michael Hekeler
> And 2nd question would be how to give the user a way to implement > something like it on there own? I was thinking of a simply standard > include in the server definition but this might mess things up if you need directory specific and user define-able override files like those .htaccess then

Re: migrate .htaccess conent to httpd.conf

2017-10-03 Thread Gregory Edigarov
On 03.10.17 15:10, rosjat wrote: Hi there, I was wondering if there is some guidence out there for this sort of thing? I know it's possible to simply block directories or put basic auth in front of it but what's about some more fine grained stuff for a file in a directory? Like this    

migrate .htaccess conent to httpd.conf

2017-10-03 Thread rosjat
Hi there, I was wondering if there is some guidence out there for this sort of thing? I know it's possible to simply block directories or put basic auth in front of it but what's about some more fine grained stuff for a file in a directory? Like this order deny,allow deny