Thank you, it works!
my conf file has the following:
location /auth
Options +IncludesNOEXEC
SetHandler perl-script
PerlAccessHandler Apache::handlers::authentication
PerlFixupHandler Apache::handlers::shtmlFixupHandler
/Location
and I create the file shtmlFixupHandler.pm with the following content:
#file begin
package Apache::handlers::shtmlFixupHandler;
use Apache::Constants qw(:common);
sub handler {
my $request = instance Apache::Request(shift);
$request-handler('server-parsed') if $request-filename =~ m/\.shtml$/;
return OK;
}
#file end
And it work fine.
When I tried to acces a page in the protected directory, for exemple,
http://mysite.com/auth/index.shtml, it ask me my credentials and then parse
the file correctly.
thank you.
Wladimir
From: simran [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Wladimir Boton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: shtml don´t get parsed with mod_perlprotecting the directory
Date: 07 Mar 2003 11:29:18 +1100
You have to install a fixup handler to tell the server to parse them
again, i have the following in my config file:
-- in httpd.conf --
PerlFixupHandler +NetChant::Component::Handlers::shtmlFixupHandler
and my shtmlFixupHandler subroutine looks like:
#
# shtmlFixupHandler
#
=head2 shtmlFixupHandler
=over
=item Description
Enables you to have shtml files in areas where you might have other
PerlHandlers installed.
ie. Assuming you have the Includes option turned on for your virtual
host/server, putting a
.shtml file in the 'auth' directory will not work as expected (aka, it
will not get parsed).
This is because there is a PerlHandler already installed in that
location which has an
associated SetHandler perl-script directive, and that directive
takes precedence over
all others.
To enable .shtml files to work in the /auth location for a virtual
host put the following
configuration in your virtual host apache config file.
Location /auth
Options +IncludesNOEXEC
SetHandler perl-script
PerlFixupHandler +NetChant::Component::Handlers::shtmlFixupHandler
/Location
=back
=cut
sub shtmlFixupHandler {
my $request= instance Apache::Request(shift);
#
#
#
$request-handler('server-parsed') if $request-filename =~
m/\.shtml$/;
#
#
#
return OK;
}
On Fri, 2003-03-07 at 11:12, Wladimir Boton wrote:
Hi,
I´m protecting a directory of my site with mod_perl, but all .shtml
files
inside it don´t get parsed by mod_include.
There are any way that shtml files get parsed?
thanks
_
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