Apache HTTP Server Version 2.2

| Description: | HTTP/1.1 proxy/gateway server | 
|---|---|
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module Identifier: | proxy_module | 
| Source File: | mod_proxy.c | 
Do not enable proxying with ProxyRequests until you have secured your server. Open proxy servers are dangerous both to your
      network and to the Internet at large.
This module implements a proxy/gateway for Apache. It implements
    proxying capability for AJP13 (Apache JServe Protocol
    version 1.3), FTP, CONNECT (for SSL),
    HTTP/0.9, HTTP/1.0, and HTTP/1.1.
    The module can be configured to connect to other proxy modules for these
    and other protocols.
Apache's proxy features are divided into several modules in
    addition to mod_proxy:
    mod_proxy_http, mod_proxy_ftp,
    mod_proxy_ajp, mod_proxy_balancer,
    and mod_proxy_connect.  Thus, if you want to use
    one or more of the particular proxy functions, load
    mod_proxy and the appropriate module(s)
    into the server (either statically at compile-time or dynamically
    via the LoadModule
    directive).
In addition, extended features are provided by other modules.
    Caching is provided by mod_cache and related
    modules.  The ability to contact remote servers using the SSL/TLS
    protocol is provided by the SSLProxy* directives of
    mod_ssl.  These additional modules will need
    to be loaded and configured to take advantage of these features.
 AllowCONNECT
 AllowCONNECT BalancerMember
 BalancerMember NoProxy
 NoProxy <Proxy>
 <Proxy> ProxyBadHeader
 ProxyBadHeader ProxyBlock
 ProxyBlock ProxyDomain
 ProxyDomain ProxyErrorOverride
 ProxyErrorOverride ProxyFtpDirCharset
 ProxyFtpDirCharset ProxyIOBufferSize
 ProxyIOBufferSize <ProxyMatch>
 <ProxyMatch> ProxyMaxForwards
 ProxyMaxForwards ProxyPass
 ProxyPass ProxyPassInterpolateEnv
 ProxyPassInterpolateEnv ProxyPassMatch
 ProxyPassMatch ProxyPassReverse
 ProxyPassReverse ProxyPassReverseCookieDomain
 ProxyPassReverseCookieDomain ProxyPassReverseCookiePath
 ProxyPassReverseCookiePath ProxyPreserveHost
 ProxyPreserveHost ProxyReceiveBufferSize
 ProxyReceiveBufferSize ProxyRemote
 ProxyRemote ProxyRemoteMatch
 ProxyRemoteMatch ProxyRequests
 ProxyRequests ProxySet
 ProxySet ProxyStatus
 ProxyStatus ProxyTimeout
 ProxyTimeout ProxyVia
 ProxyVia Forward Proxies and Reverse 
       Proxies/Gateways
 Forward Proxies and Reverse 
       Proxies/Gateways Basic Examples
 Basic Examples Workers
 Workers Controlling access to your proxy
 Controlling access to your proxy Slow Startup
 Slow Startup Intranet Proxy
 Intranet Proxy Protocol Adjustments
 Protocol Adjustments Request Bodies
 Request Bodies Reverse Proxy Request Headers
 Reverse Proxy Request HeadersApache can be configured in both a forward and reverse proxy (also known as gateway) mode.
An ordinary forward proxy is an intermediate server that sits between the client and the origin server. In order to get content from the origin server, the client sends a request to the proxy naming the origin server as the target and the proxy then requests the content from the origin server and returns it to the client. The client must be specially configured to use the forward proxy to access other sites.
A typical usage of a forward proxy is to provide Internet
      access to internal clients that are otherwise restricted by a
      firewall.  The forward proxy can also use caching (as provided
      by mod_cache) to reduce network usage.
The forward proxy is activated using the ProxyRequests directive.  Because
      forward proxies allow clients to access arbitrary sites through
      your server and to hide their true origin, it is essential that
      you secure your server so that only
      authorized clients can access the proxy before activating a
      forward proxy.
A reverse proxy (or gateway), by contrast, appears to the client just like an ordinary web server. No special configuration on the client is necessary. The client makes ordinary requests for content in the name-space of the reverse proxy. The reverse proxy then decides where to send those requests, and returns the content as if it was itself the origin.
A typical usage of a reverse proxy is to provide Internet users access to a server that is behind a firewall. Reverse proxies can also be used to balance load among several back-end servers, or to provide caching for a slower back-end server. In addition, reverse proxies can be used simply to bring several servers into the same URL space.
A reverse proxy is activated using the ProxyPass directive or the
      [P] flag to the RewriteRule directive.  It is
      not necessary to turn ProxyRequests on in order to
      configure a reverse proxy.
The examples below are only a very basic idea to help you get started. Please read the documentation on the individual directives.
In addition, if you wish to have caching enabled, consult
    the documentation from mod_cache.
    ProxyPass /foo http://foo.example.com/bar
    ProxyPassReverse /foo http://foo.example.com/bar
    
    ProxyRequests On
    ProxyVia On
    
    <Proxy *>
    
      Order deny,allow
      Deny from all
      Allow from internal.example.com
    
    </Proxy>
    
The proxy manages the configuration of origin servers and their communication parameters in objects called workers. There are two built-in workers, the default forward proxy worker and the default reverse proxy worker. Additional workers can be configured explicitly.
The two default workers have a fixed configuration and will be used if no other worker matches the request. They do not use HTTP Keep-Alive or connection pooling. The TCP connections to the origin server will instead be opened and closed for each request.
Explicitly configured workers are identified by their URL.
      They are usually created and configured using
      ProxyPass or
      ProxyPassMatch when used
      for a reverse proxy:
          ProxyPass /example http://backend.example.com connectiontimeout=5 timeout=30
      
This will create a worker associated with the origin server URL
      http://backend.example.com and using the given timeout
      values. When used in a forward proxy, workers are usually defined
      via the ProxySet directive:
          ProxySet http://backend.example.com connectiontimeout=5 timeout=30
      
or alternatively using Proxy
      and ProxySet:
        <Proxy http://backend.example.com>
        
          ProxySet connectiontimeout=5 timeout=30
        
        </Proxy>
      
Using explicitly configured workers in the forward mode is
      not very common, because forward proxies usually communicate with many
      different origin servers. Creating explicit workers for some of the
      origin servers can still be useful, if they are used very often.
      Explicitly configured workers have no concept of forward or reverse
      proxying by themselves. They encapsulate a common concept of
      communication with origin servers. A worker created by
      ProxyPass for use in a
      reverse proxy will be also used for forward proxy requests whenever
      the URL to the origin server matches the worker URL and vice versa.
The URL identifying a direct worker is the URL of its origin server including any path components given:
          ProxyPass /examples http://backend.example.com/examples
          ProxyPass /docs http://backend.example.com/docs
      
This example defines two different workers, each using a separate connection pool and configuration.
Worker sharing happens if the worker URLs overlap, which occurs when the URL of some worker is a leading substring of the URL of another worker defined later in the configuration file. In the following example
            ProxyPass /apps http://backend.example.com/ timeout=60
            ProxyPass /examples http://backend.example.com/examples timeout=10
        
the second worker isn't actually created. Instead the first
        worker is used. The benefit is, that there is only one connection pool,
        so connections are more often reused. Note that all configuration attributes
        given explicitly for the later worker and some configuration defaults will
        overwrite the configuration given for the first worker. This will be logged
        as a warning. In the above example the resulting timeout value
        for the URL /apps will be 10 instead
        of 60!
If you want to avoid worker sharing, sort your worker definitions
        by URL length, starting with the longest worker URLs. If you want to maximize
        worker sharing use the reverse sort order. See also the related warning about
        ordering ProxyPass directives.
Explicitly configured workers come in two flavors:
      direct workers and (load) balancer workers.
      They support many important configuration attributes which are
      described below in the ProxyPass
      directive. The same attributes can also be set using
      ProxySet.
The set of options available for a direct worker
      depends on the protocol, which is specified in the origin server URL.
      Available protocols include ajp,
      ftp, http and scgi.
Balancer workers are virtual workers that use direct workers known as their members to actually handle the requests. Each balancer can have multiple members. When it handles a request, it chooses a member based on the configured load balancing algorithm.
A balancer worker is created if its worker URL uses
      balancer as the protocol scheme.
      The balancer URL uniquely identifies the balancer worker.
      Members are added to a balancer using
      BalancerMember.
You can control who can access your proxy via the <Proxy> control block as in
      the following example:
        <Proxy *>
        
          Order Deny,Allow
          Deny from all
          Allow from 192.168.0
        
        </Proxy>
      
For more information on access control directives, see
      mod_authz_host.
Strictly limiting access is essential if you are using a
      forward proxy (using the ProxyRequests directive).
      Otherwise, your server can be used by any client to access
      arbitrary hosts while hiding his or her true identity.  This is
      dangerous both for your network and for the Internet at large.
      When using a reverse proxy (using the ProxyPass directive with
      ProxyRequests Off), access control is less
      critical because clients can only contact the hosts that you
      have specifically configured.
If you're using the ProxyBlock directive, hostnames' IP addresses are looked up
      and cached during startup for later match test. This may take a few
      seconds (or more) depending on the speed with which the hostname lookups
      occur.
An Apache proxy server situated in an intranet needs to forward
      external requests through the company's firewall (for this, configure
      the ProxyRemote directive
      to forward the respective scheme to the firewall proxy).
      However, when it has to
      access resources within the intranet, it can bypass the firewall when
      accessing hosts. The NoProxy
      directive is useful for specifying which hosts belong to the intranet and
      should be accessed directly.
Users within an intranet tend to omit the local domain name from their
      WWW requests, thus requesting "http://somehost/" instead of
      http://somehost.example.com/. Some commercial proxy servers
      let them get away with this and simply serve the request, implying a
      configured local domain. When the ProxyDomain directive is used and the server is configured for proxy service, Apache can return
      a redirect response and send the client to the correct, fully qualified,
      server address. This is the preferred method since the user's bookmark
      files will then contain fully qualified hosts.
For circumstances where mod_proxy is sending
      requests to an origin server that doesn't properly implement
      keepalives or HTTP/1.1, there are two environment variables that can force the
      request to use HTTP/1.0 with no keepalive. These are set via the
      SetEnv directive.
These are the force-proxy-request-1.0 and
      proxy-nokeepalive notes.
        <Location /buggyappserver/>
        
          ProxyPass http://buggyappserver:7001/foo/
          SetEnv force-proxy-request-1.0 1
          SetEnv proxy-nokeepalive 1
        
        </Location>
      
Some request methods such as POST include a request body.
    The HTTP protocol requires that requests which include a body
    either use chunked transfer encoding or send a
    Content-Length request header.  When passing these
    requests on to the origin server, mod_proxy_http
    will always attempt to send the Content-Length.  But
    if the body is large and the original request used chunked
    encoding, then chunked encoding may also be used in the upstream
    request.  You can control this selection using environment variables.  Setting
    proxy-sendcl ensures maximum compatibility with
    upstream servers by always sending the
    Content-Length, while setting
    proxy-sendchunked minimizes resource usage by using
    chunked encoding.
When acting in a reverse-proxy mode (using the ProxyPass directive, for example),
    mod_proxy_http adds several request headers in
    order to pass information to the origin server. These headers
    are:
X-Forwarded-ForX-Forwarded-HostHost 
       HTTP request header.X-Forwarded-ServerBe careful when using these headers on the origin server, since
    they will contain more than one (comma-separated) value if the
    original request already contained one of these headers. For
    example, you can use %{X-Forwarded-For}i in the log
    format string of the origin server to log the original clients IP
    address, but you may get more than one address if the request
    passes through several proxies.
See also the ProxyPreserveHost and ProxyVia directives, which control
    other request headers.
| Description: | Ports that are allowed to CONNECTthrough the
proxy | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | AllowCONNECT port [port] ... | 
| Default: | AllowCONNECT 443 563 | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
The AllowCONNECT directive specifies a list
    of port numbers to which the proxy CONNECT method may
    connect.  Today's browsers use this method when a https
    connection is requested and proxy tunneling over HTTP is in effect.
By default, only the default https port (443) and the
    default snews port (563) are enabled. Use the
    AllowCONNECT directive to override this default and
    allow connections to the listed ports only.
Note that you'll need to have mod_proxy_connect present
    in the server in order to get the support for the CONNECT at
    all.
| Description: | Add a member to a load balancing group | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | BalancerMember [balancerurl] url [key=value [key=value ...]] | 
| Context: | directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | BalancerMember is only available in Apache 2.2 and later. | 
This directive adds a member to a load balancing group. It could be used
    within a <Proxy balancer://...> container
    directive, and can take any of the key value pairs available to
    ProxyPass directives.
The balancerurl is only needed when not in <Proxy balancer://...>
    container directive. It corresponds to the url of a balancer defined in
    ProxyPass directive.
| Description: | Hosts, domains, or networks that will be connected to directly | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | NoProxy host [host] ... | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
This directive is only useful for Apache proxy servers within
    intranets.  The NoProxy directive specifies a
    list of subnets, IP addresses, hosts and/or domains, separated by
    spaces. A request to a host which matches one or more of these is
    always served directly, without forwarding to the configured
    ProxyRemote proxy server(s).
      ProxyRemote  *  http://firewall.example.com:81
      NoProxy         .example.com 192.168.112.0/21
    
The host arguments to the NoProxy
    directive are one of the following type list:
A Domain is a partially qualified DNS domain name, preceded by a period. It represents a list of hosts which logically belong to the same DNS domain or zone (i.e., the suffixes of the hostnames are all ending in Domain).
      .com .apache.org.
    
To distinguish Domains from Hostnames (both syntactically and semantically; a DNS domain can have a DNS A record, too!), Domains are always written with a leading period.
Domain name comparisons are done without regard to the case, and
      Domains are always assumed to be anchored in the root of the
      DNS tree, therefore two domains .ExAmple.com and
      .example.com. (note the trailing period) are considered
      equal. Since a domain comparison does not involve a DNS lookup, it is much
      more efficient than subnet comparison.
A SubNet is a partially qualified internet address in numeric (dotted quad) form, optionally followed by a slash and the netmask, specified as the number of significant bits in the SubNet. It is used to represent a subnet of hosts which can be reached over a common network interface. In the absence of the explicit net mask it is assumed that omitted (or zero valued) trailing digits specify the mask. (In this case, the netmask can only be multiples of 8 bits wide.) Examples:
192.168 or 192.168.0.0255.255.0.0)192.168.112.0/21192.168.112.0/21 with a netmask of 21
    valid bits (also used in the form 255.255.248.0)As a degenerate case, a SubNet with 32 valid bits is the equivalent to an IPAddr, while a SubNet with zero valid bits (e.g., 0.0.0.0/0) is the same as the constant _Default_, matching any IP address.
A IPAddr represents a fully qualified internet address in numeric (dotted quad) form. Usually, this address represents a host, but there need not necessarily be a DNS domain name connected with the address.
      192.168.123.7
    
An IPAddr does not need to be resolved by the DNS system, so it can result in more effective apache performance.
A Hostname is a fully qualified DNS domain name which can be resolved to one or more IPAddrs via the DNS domain name service. It represents a logical host (in contrast to Domains, see above) and must be resolvable to at least one IPAddr (or often to a list of hosts with different IPAddrs).
      prep.ai.example.com
      www.apache.org
    
In many situations, it is more effective to specify an IPAddr in place of a Hostname since a DNS lookup can be avoided. Name resolution in Apache can take a remarkable deal of time when the connection to the name server uses a slow PPP link.
Hostname comparisons are done without regard to the case,
      and Hostnames are always assumed to be anchored in the root
      of the DNS tree, therefore two hosts WWW.ExAmple.com
      and www.example.com. (note the trailing period) are
      considered equal.
| Description: | Container for directives applied to proxied resources | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | <Proxy wildcard-url> ...</Proxy> | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
Directives placed in <Proxy>
    sections apply only to matching proxied content.  Shell-style wildcards are
    allowed.
For example, the following will allow only hosts in
    yournetwork.example.com to access content via your proxy
    server:
      <Proxy *>
      
        Order Deny,Allow
        Deny from all
        Allow from yournetwork.example.com
      
      </Proxy>
    
The following example will process all files in the foo
    directory of example.com through the INCLUDES
    filter when they are sent through the proxy server:
      <Proxy http://example.com/foo/*>
      
        SetOutputFilter INCLUDES
      
      </Proxy>
    
| Description: | Determines how to handle bad header lines in a response | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyBadHeader IsError|Ignore|StartBody | 
| Default: | ProxyBadHeader IsError | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | Available in Apache 2.0.44 and later | 
The ProxyBadHeader directive determines the
    behaviour of mod_proxy if it receives syntactically invalid
    response header lines (i.e. containing no colon) from the origin 
    server. The following arguments are possible:
IsErrorIgnoreStartBody| Description: | Words, hosts, or domains that are banned from being proxied | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyBlock *|word|host|domain
[word|host|domain] ... | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
The ProxyBlock directive specifies a list of
    words, hosts and/or domains, separated by spaces.  HTTP, HTTPS, and
    FTP document requests to sites whose names contain matched words,
    hosts or domains are blocked by the proxy server. The proxy
    module will also attempt to determine IP addresses of list items which
    may be hostnames during startup, and cache them for match test as
    well. That may slow down the startup time of the server.
      ProxyBlock joes-garage.com some-host.co.uk rocky.wotsamattau.edu
    
rocky.wotsamattau.edu would also be matched if referenced by
    IP address.
Note that wotsamattau would also be sufficient to match
    wotsamattau.edu.
Note also that
      ProxyBlock *
    
blocks connections to all sites.
| Description: | Default domain name for proxied requests | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyDomain Domain | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
This directive is only useful for Apache proxy servers within
    intranets. The ProxyDomain directive specifies
    the default domain which the apache proxy server will belong to. If a
    request to a host without a domain name is encountered, a redirection
    response to the same host with the configured Domain appended
    will be generated.
      ProxyRemote  *  http://firewall.example.com:81
      NoProxy         .example.com 192.168.112.0/21
      ProxyDomain     .example.com
    
| Description: | Override error pages for proxied content | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyErrorOverride On|Off | 
| Default: | ProxyErrorOverride Off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | Available in version 2.0 and later | 
This directive is useful for reverse-proxy setups, where you want to 
    have a common look and feel on the error pages seen by the end user. 
    This also allows for included files (via
    mod_include's SSI) to get
    the error code and act accordingly (default behavior would display
    the error page of the proxied server, turning this on shows the SSI
    Error message).
This directive does not affect the processing of informational (1xx), normal success (2xx), or redirect (3xx) responses.
| Description: | Define the character set for proxied FTP listings | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyFtpDirCharset character set | 
| Default: | ProxyFtpDirCharset ISO-8859-1 | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | Available in Apache 2.2.7 and later | 
The ProxyFtpDirCharset directive defines the
    character set to be set for FTP directory listings in HTML generated by
    mod_proxy_ftp.
| Description: | Determine size of internal data throughput buffer | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyIOBufferSize bytes | 
| Default: | ProxyIOBufferSize 8192 | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
The ProxyIOBufferSize directive adjusts the size
    of the internal buffer, which is used as a scratchpad for the data between
    input and output. The size must be less or equal 8192.
In almost every case there's no reason to change that value.
| Description: | Container for directives applied to regular-expression-matched proxied resources | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | <ProxyMatch regex> ...</ProxyMatch> | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
The <ProxyMatch> directive is
    identical to the <Proxy> directive, except it matches URLs
    using regular expressions.
| Description: | Maximium number of proxies that a request can be forwarded through | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyMaxForwards number | 
| Default: | ProxyMaxForwards -1 | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | Available in Apache 2.0 and later; default behaviour changed in 2.2.7 | 
The ProxyMaxForwards directive specifies the
    maximum number of proxies through which a request may pass, if there's no
    Max-Forwards header supplied with the request. This may
    be set to prevent infinite proxy loops, or a DoS attack.
      ProxyMaxForwards 15
    
Note that setting ProxyMaxForwards is a
    violation of the HTTP/1.1 protocol (RFC2616), which forbids a Proxy
    setting Max-Forwards if the Client didn't set it.
    Earlier Apache versions would always set it.  A negative
    ProxyMaxForwards value, including the
    default -1, gives you protocol-compliant behaviour, but may
    leave you open to loops.
| Description: | Maps remote servers into the local server URL-space | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyPass [path] !|url [key=value
key=value ...]] [nocanon] [interpolate] | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
This directive allows remote servers to be mapped into the space of the local server; the local server does not act as a proxy in the conventional sense, but appears to be a mirror of the remote server. The local server is often called a reverse proxy or gateway. The path is the name of a local virtual path; url is a partial URL for the remote server and cannot include a query string.
ProxyRequests directive should
    usually be set off when using
    ProxyPass.Suppose the local server has address http://example.com/;
    then
      ProxyPass /mirror/foo/ http://backend.example.com/
    
will cause a local request for
    http://example.com/mirror/foo/bar to be internally converted
    into a proxy request to http://backend.example.com/bar.
If the first argument ends with a trailing /, the second argument should also end with a trailing / and vice versa. Otherwise the resulting requests to the backend may miss some needed slashes and do not deliver the expected results.
The ! directive is useful in situations where you don't want
    to reverse-proxy a subdirectory, e.g.
      ProxyPass /mirror/foo/i !
      ProxyPass /mirror/foo http://backend.example.com
    
will proxy all requests to /mirror/foo to
    backend.example.com except requests made to
    /mirror/foo/i.
The configured ProxyPass
      and ProxyPassMatch
      rules are checked in the order of configuration. The first rule that
      matches wins. So usually you should sort conflicting
      ProxyPass rules starting with the
      longest URLs first. Otherwise later rules for longer URLS will be hidden
      by any earlier rule which uses a leading substring of the URL. Note that
      there is some relation with worker sharing.
For the same reasons exclusions must come before the
      general ProxyPass directives.
In Apache HTTP Server 2.1 and later, mod_proxy supports pooled
    connections to a backend server.  Connections created on demand
    can be retained in a pool for future use.  Limits on the pool size
    and other settings can be coded on
    the ProxyPass directive
    using  key=value parameters, described in the table
    below.
By default, mod_proxy will allow and retain the maximum number of
    connections that could be used simultaneously by that web server child
    process.  Use the max parameter to reduce the number from
    the default.  Use the ttl parameter to set an optional
    time to live; connections which have been unused for at least
    ttl seconds will be closed.  ttl can be used
    to avoid using a connection which is subject to closing because of the
    backend server's keep-alive timeout.
The pool of connections is maintained per web server child
    process, and max and other settings are not coordinated 
    among all child processes, except when only one child process is allowed
    by configuration or MPM design.
        ProxyPass /example http://backend.example.com max=20 ttl=120 retry=300
    
| Parameter | Default | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| min | 0 | Minimum number of connection pool entries, unrelated to the actual number of connections. This only needs to be modified from the default for special circumstances where heap memory associated with the backend connections should be preallocated or retained. | 
| max | 1...n | Maximum number of connections that will be allowed to the
    backend server. The default for this limit is the number of threads
    per process in the active MPM. In the Prefork MPM, this is always 1,
    while with other MPMs it is controlled by the ThreadsPerChilddirective. | 
| smax | max | Retained connection pool entries above this limit are freed
    during certain operations if they have been unused for longer than
    the time to live, controlled by the ttlparameter.  If
    the connection pool entry has an associated connection, it will be
    closed.  This only needs to be modified from the default for special
    circumstances where connection pool entries and any associated
    connections which have exceeded the time to live need to be freed or
    closed more aggressively. | 
| acquire | - | If set this will be the maximum time to wait for a free
    connection in the connection pool, in milliseconds. If there are no free
    connections in the pool the Apache will return SERVER_BUSYstatus to the client. | 
| connectiontimeout | timeout | Connect timeout in seconds. The number of seconds Apache waits for the creation of a connection to the backend to complete. By adding a postfix of ms the timeout can be also set in milliseconds. | 
| disablereuse | Off | This parameter should be used when you want to force mod_proxy
    to immediately close a connection to the backend after being used, and
    thus, disable its persistent connection and pool for that backend.
    This helps in various situations where a firewall between Apache and
    the backend server (regardless of protocol) tends to silently
    drop connections or when backends themselves may be under round-
    robin DNS. To disable connection pooling reuse,
    set this property value to On. | 
| flushpackets | off | Determines whether the proxy module will auto-flush the output brigade after each "chunk" of data. 'off' means that it will flush only when needed, 'on' means after each chunk is sent and 'auto' means poll/wait for a period of time and flush if no input has been received for 'flushwait' milliseconds. Currently this is in effect only for AJP. | 
| flushwait | 10 | The time to wait for additional input, in milliseconds, before flushing the output brigade if 'flushpackets' is 'auto'. | 
| keepalive | Off | This parameter should be used when you have a firewall between your
    Apache and the backend server, who tend to drop inactive connections.
    This flag will tell the Operating System to send  The frequency of initial and subsequent TCP keepalive probes depends on global OS settings, and may be as high as 2 hours. To be useful, the frequency configured in the OS must be smaller than the threshold used by the firewall. | 
| lbset | 0 | Sets the load balancer cluster set that the worker is a member of. The load balancer will try all members of a lower numbered lbset before trying higher numbered ones. | 
| ping | 0 | Ping property tells webserver to send a CPINGrequest on ajp13 connection before forwarding a request.
        The parameter is the delay in seconds to wait for theCPONGreply.
        This features has been added to avoid problem with hung and
        busy Tomcat's and require ajp13 ping/pong support which has
        been implemented on Tomcat 3.3.2+, 4.1.28+ and 5.0.13+.
        This will increase the network traffic during the normal operation
        which could be an issue, but it will lower the
        traffic in case some of the cluster nodes are down or busy.
        Currently this has an effect only for AJP.
        By adding a postfix of ms the delay can be also set in
        milliseconds. | 
| loadfactor | 1 | Worker load factor. Used with BalancerMember. It is a number between 1 and 100 and defines the normalized weighted load applied to the worker. | 
| redirect | - | Redirection Route of the worker. This value is usually set dynamically to enable safe removal of the node from the cluster. If set all requests without session id will be redirected to the BalancerMember that has route parameter equal as this value. | 
| retry | 60 | Connection pool worker retry timeout in seconds. If the connection pool worker to the backend server is in the error state, Apache will not forward any requests to that server until the timeout expires. This enables to shut down the backend server for maintenance, and bring it back online later. A value of 0 means always retry workers in an error state with no timeout. | 
| route | - | Route of the worker when used inside load balancer. The route is a value appended to session id. | 
| status | - | Single letter value defining the initial status of this worker: 'D' is disabled, 'S' is stopped, 'I' is ignore-errors, 'H' is hot-standby and 'E' is in an error state. Status can be set (which is the default) by prepending with '+' or cleared by prepending with '-'. Thus, a setting of 'S-E' sets this worker to Stopped and clears the in-error flag. | 
| timeout | ProxyTimeout | Connection timeout in seconds. The number of seconds Apache waits for data sent by / to the backend. | 
| ttl | - | Time to live for inactive connections and associated connection pool entries, in seconds. Once reaching this limit, a connection will not be used again; it will be closed at some later time. | 
If the ProxyPass directive scheme starts with the
    balancer:// (eg: balancer://cluster/, 
    any path information is ignored)  then a virtual worker that does not really
    communicate with the backend server will be created. Instead it is responsible
    for the management of several "real" workers. In that case the special set of
    parameters can be add to this virtual worker. See mod_proxy_balancer
    for more information about how the balancer works.
    
| Parameter | Default | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| lbmethod | byrequests | Balancer load-balance method. Select the load-balancing scheduler
        method to use. Either byrequests, to perform weighted
        request counting,bytraffic, to perform weighted
        traffic byte count balancing, orbybusyness(Apache HTTP Server 2.2.10 and later), to perform pending request 
        balancing. Default isbyrequests. | 
| maxattempts | One less than the number of workers, or 1 with a single worker. | Maximum number of failover attempts before giving up. | 
| nofailover | Off | If set to Onthe session will break if the worker is in
        error state or disabled. Set this value to On if backend servers do not
        support session replication. | 
| stickysession | - | Balancer sticky session name. The value is usually set to something
        like JSESSIONIDorPHPSESSIONID,
        and it depends on the backend application server that support sessions.
        If the backend application server uses different name for cookies
        and url encoded id (like servlet containers) use | to to separate them.
        The first part is for the cookie the second for the path. | 
| scolonpathdelim | Off | If set to Onthe semi-colon character ';' will be
        used as an additional sticky session path deliminator/separator. This
        is mainly used to emulate mod_jk's behavior when dealing with paths such
        asJSESSIONID=6736bcf34;foo=aabfa | 
| timeout | 0 | Balancer timeout in seconds. If set this will be the maximum time to wait for a free worker. Default is not to wait. | 
| failonstatus | - | A single or comma-separated list of HTTP status codes. If set this will force the worker into error state when the backend returns any status code in the list. Worker recovery behaves the same as other worker errors. Available with Apache HTTP Server 2.2.17 and later. | 
A sample balancer setup
      ProxyPass /special-area http://special.example.com smax=5 max=10
      ProxyPass / balancer://mycluster/ stickysession=JSESSIONID|jsessionid nofailover=On
      <Proxy balancer://mycluster>
      
        BalancerMember ajp://1.2.3.4:8009
        BalancerMember ajp://1.2.3.5:8009 loadfactor=20
        # Less powerful server, don't send as many requests there,
        BalancerMember ajp://1.2.3.6:8009 loadfactor=5
      
      </Proxy>
    
Setting up a hot-standby, that will only be used if no other members are available
      ProxyPass / balancer://hotcluster/ 
      <Proxy balancer://hotcluster>
      
        BalancerMember ajp://1.2.3.4:8009 loadfactor=1
        BalancerMember ajp://1.2.3.5:8009 loadfactor=2
        # The below is the hot standby
        BalancerMember ajp://1.2.3.6:8009 status=+H
        ProxySet lbmethod=bytraffic
      
      </Proxy>
    
Normally, mod_proxy will canonicalise ProxyPassed URLs. But this may be incompatible with some backends, particularly those that make use of PATH_INFO. The optional nocanon keyword suppresses this, and passes the URL path "raw" to the backend. Note that may affect the security of your backend, as it removes the normal limited protection against URL-based attacks provided by the proxy.
The optional interpolate keyword (available in
    httpd 2.2.9 and later), in combination with
    ProxyPassInterpolateEnv causes the ProxyPass
    to interpolate environment variables, using the syntax
    ${VARNAME}.  Note that many of the standard CGI-derived
    environment variables will not exist when this interpolation happens,
    so you may still have to resort to mod_rewrite
    for complex rules.
When used inside a <Location> section, the first argument is omitted and the local
    directory is obtained from the <Location>. The same will occur inside a
    <LocationMatch> section,
    however ProxyPass does not interpret the regexp as such, so it is necessary
    to use ProxyPassMatch in this situation instead.
This directive is not supported in <Directory> or <Files> sections.
If you require a more flexible reverse-proxy configuration, see the
    RewriteRule directive with the
    [P] flag.
| Description: | Enable Environment Variable interpolation in Reverse Proxy configurations | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyPassInterpolateEnv On|Off | 
| Default: | ProxyPassInterpolateEnv Off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | Available in httpd 2.2.9 and later | 
This directive, together with the interpolate argument to
    ProxyPass, ProxyPassReverse,
    ProxyPassReverseCookieDomain and
    ProxyPassReverseCookiePath
    enables reverse proxies to be dynamically
    configured using environment variables, which may be set by
    another module such as mod_rewrite.
    It affects the ProxyPass,
    ProxyPassReverse,
    ProxyPassReverseCookieDomain, and
    ProxyPassReverseCookiePath directives,
    and causes them to substitute the value of an environment
    variable varname for the string ${varname}
    in configuration directives (if the interpolate option is set).
Keep this turned off (for server performance) unless you need it!
| Description: | Maps remote servers into the local server URL-space using regular expressions | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyPassMatch [regex] !|url [key=value
	[key=value ...]] | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | available in Apache 2.2.5 and later | 
This directive is equivalent to ProxyPass,
       but makes use of regular expressions, instead of simple prefix matching. The
       supplied regular expression is matched against the url, and if it
       matches, the server will substitute any parenthesized matches into the given
       string and use it as a new url.
Suppose the local server has address http://example.com/;
    then
      ProxyPassMatch ^(/.*\.gif)$ http://backend.example.com$1
    
will cause a local request for
    http://example.com/foo/bar.gif to be internally converted
    into a proxy request to http://backend.example.com/foo/bar.gif.
The URL argument must be parsable as a URL before regexp substitutions (as well as after). This limits the matches you can use. For instance, if we had used
        ProxyPassMatch ^(/.*\.gif)$ http://backend.example.com:8000$1
      
in our previous example, it would fail with a syntax error at server startup. This is a bug (PR 46665 in the ASF bugzilla), and the workaround is to reformulate the match:
        ProxyPassMatch ^/(.*\.gif)$ http://backend.example.com:8000/$1
      
The ! directive is useful in situations where you don't want
    to reverse-proxy a subdirectory.
When used inside a <LocationMatch> section, the first argument is omitted and the
    regexp is obtained from the <LocationMatch>.
If you require a more flexible reverse-proxy configuration, see the
    RewriteRule directive with the
    [P] flag.
Take care when constructing the target URL of the rule, considering the security impact from allowing the client influence over the set of URLs to which your server will act as a proxy. Ensure that the scheme and hostname part of the URL is either fixed, or does not allow the client undue influence.
| Description: | Adjusts the URL in HTTP response headers sent from a reverse proxied server | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyPassReverse [path] url
[interpolate] | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
This directive lets Apache adjust the URL in the Location,
    Content-Location and URI headers on HTTP
    redirect responses. This is essential when Apache is used as a
    reverse proxy (or gateway) to avoid by-passing the reverse proxy
    because of HTTP redirects on the backend servers which stay behind
    the reverse proxy.
Only the HTTP response headers specifically mentioned above will be rewritten. Apache will not rewrite other response headers, nor will it rewrite URL references inside HTML pages. This means that if the proxied content contains absolute URL references, they will by-pass the proxy. A third-party module that will look inside the HTML and rewrite URL references is Nick Kew's mod_proxy_html.
path is the name of a local virtual path. url is a
    partial URL for the remote server - the same way they are used for the
    ProxyPass directive.
For example, suppose the local server has address
    http://example.com/; then
      ProxyPass         /mirror/foo/ http://backend.example.com/
      ProxyPassReverse  /mirror/foo/ http://backend.example.com/
      ProxyPassReverseCookieDomain  backend.example.com  public.example.com
      ProxyPassReverseCookiePath  /  /mirror/foo/
    
will not only cause a local request for the
    http://example.com/mirror/foo/bar to be internally converted
    into a proxy request to http://backend.example.com/bar
    (the functionality ProxyPass provides here). It also takes care
    of redirects the server backend.example.com sends: when
    http://backend.example.com/bar is redirected by him to
    http://backend.example.com/quux Apache adjusts this to
    http://example.com/mirror/foo/quux before forwarding the HTTP
    redirect response to the client. Note that the hostname used for
    constructing the URL is chosen in respect to the setting of the UseCanonicalName directive.
Note that this ProxyPassReverse directive can
    also be used in conjunction with the proxy pass-through feature
    (RewriteRule ...  [P]) from mod_rewrite
    because it doesn't depend on a corresponding ProxyPass directive.
The optional interpolate keyword (available in
    httpd 2.2.9 and later), used together with
    ProxyPassInterpolateEnv, enables interpolation
    of environment variables specified using the format ${VARNAME}.
    
When used inside a <Location> section, the first argument is omitted and the local
    directory is obtained from the <Location>. The same occurs inside a <LocationMatch> section, but will probably not work as
    intended, as ProxyPassReverse will interpret the regexp literally as a
    path; if needed in this situation, specify the ProxyPassReverse outside
    the section, or in a separate <Location> section.
This directive is not supported in <Directory> or <Files> sections.
| Description: | Adjusts the Domain string in Set-Cookie headers from a reverse- proxied server | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyPassReverseCookieDomain internal-domain
public-domain [interpolate] | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
Usage is basically similar to
ProxyPassReverse, but instead of
rewriting headers that are a URL, this rewrites the domain
string in Set-Cookie headers.
| Description: | Adjusts the Path string in Set-Cookie headers from a reverse- proxied server | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyPassReverseCookiePath internal-path
public-path [interpolate] | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
Useful in conjunction with
ProxyPassReverse
in situations where backend URL paths are mapped to public paths on the
reverse proxy. This directive rewrites the path string in
Set-Cookie headers. If the beginning of the cookie path matches
internal-path, the cookie path will be replaced with
public-path.
In the example given with 
ProxyPassReverse, the directive:
    
      ProxyPassReverseCookiePath  /  /mirror/foo/
    
/ (or
/example or, in fact, anything) to /mirror/foo/.
| Description: | Use incoming Host HTTP request header for proxy request | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyPreserveHost On|Off | 
| Default: | ProxyPreserveHost Off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | Available in Apache 2.0.31 and later. | 
When enabled, this option will pass the Host: line from the incoming
    request to the proxied host, instead of the hostname specified in the
    ProxyPass line.
This option should normally be turned Off. It is mostly 
    useful in special configurations like proxied mass name-based virtual
    hosting, where the original Host header needs to be evaluated by the
    backend server.
| Description: | Network buffer size for proxied HTTP and FTP connections | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyReceiveBufferSize bytes | 
| Default: | ProxyReceiveBufferSize 0 | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
The ProxyReceiveBufferSize directive specifies an
    explicit (TCP/IP) network buffer size for proxied HTTP and FTP connections,
    for increased throughput. It has to be greater than 512 or set
    to 0 to indicate that the system's default buffer size should
    be used.
      ProxyReceiveBufferSize 2048
    
| Description: | Remote proxy used to handle certain requests | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyRemote match remote-server | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
This defines remote proxies to this proxy. match is either the
    name of a URL-scheme that the remote server supports, or a partial URL
    for which the remote server should be used, or * to indicate
    the server should be contacted for all requests. remote-server is
    a partial URL for the remote server. Syntax:
      remote-server =
          scheme://hostname[:port]
    
scheme is effectively the protocol that should be used to
    communicate with the remote server; only http and https
    are supported by this module. When using https, the requests
    are forwarded through the remote proxy using the HTTP CONNECT method.
      ProxyRemote http://goodguys.example.com/ http://mirrorguys.example.com:8000
      ProxyRemote * http://cleverproxy.localdomain
      ProxyRemote ftp http://ftpproxy.mydomain:8080
    
In the last example, the proxy will forward FTP requests, encapsulated as yet another HTTP proxy request, to another proxy which can handle them.
This option also supports reverse proxy configuration - a backend webserver can be embedded within a virtualhost URL space even if that server is hidden by another forward proxy.
| Description: | Remote proxy used to handle requests matched by regular expressions | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyRemoteMatch regex remote-server | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
The ProxyRemoteMatch is identical to the
    ProxyRemote directive, except the
    first argument is a regular expression
    match against the requested URL.
| Description: | Enables forward (standard) proxy requests | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyRequests On|Off | 
| Default: | ProxyRequests Off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
This allows or prevents Apache from functioning as a forward proxy
    server. (Setting ProxyRequests to Off does not disable use of
    the ProxyPass directive.)
In a typical reverse proxy or gateway configuration, this
    option should be set to
    Off.
In order to get the functionality of proxying HTTP or FTP sites, you
    need also mod_proxy_http or mod_proxy_ftp
    (or both) present in the server.
Do not enable proxying with ProxyRequests until you have secured your server.  Open proxy servers are dangerous
      both to your network and to the Internet at large.
| Description: | Set various Proxy balancer or member parameters | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxySet url key=value [key=value ...] | 
| Context: | directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | ProxySet is only available in Apache 2.2 and later. | 
This directive is used as an alternate method of setting any of the
    parameters available to Proxy balancers and workers normally done via the
    ProxyPass directive. If used
    within a <Proxy balancer url|worker url>
    container directive, the url argument is not required. As a side
    effect the respective balancer or worker gets created. This can be useful
    when doing reverse proxying via a
    RewriteRule instead of a
    ProxyPass directive.
      <Proxy balancer://hotcluster>
      
        BalancerMember http://www2.example.com:8080 loadfactor=1
        BalancerMember http://www3.example.com:8080 loadfactor=2
        ProxySet lbmethod=bytraffic
      
      </Proxy>
    
      <Proxy http://backend>
      
        ProxySet keepalive=On
      
      </Proxy>
    
        ProxySet balancer://foo lbmethod=bytraffic timeout=15
    
        ProxySet ajp://backend:7001 timeout=15
    
Keep in mind that the same parameter key can have a different meaning depending whether it is applied to a balancer or a worker as shown by the two examples above regarding timeout.
| Description: | Show Proxy LoadBalancer status in mod_status | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyStatus Off|On|Full | 
| Default: | ProxyStatus Off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | Available in version 2.2 and later | 
This directive determines whether or not proxy
    loadbalancer status data is displayed via the mod_status
    server-status page.
Full is synonymous with On
| Description: | Network timeout for proxied requests | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyTimeout seconds | 
| Default: | Value of  | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
| Compatibility: | Available in Apache 2.0.31 and later | 
This directive allows a user to specifiy a timeout on proxy requests. This is useful when you have a slow/buggy appserver which hangs, and you would rather just return a timeout and fail gracefully instead of waiting however long it takes the server to return.
| Description: | Information provided in the ViaHTTP response
header for proxied requests | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | ProxyVia On|Off|Full|Block | 
| Default: | ProxyVia Off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_proxy | 
This directive controls the use of the Via: HTTP
    header by the proxy. Its intended use is to control the flow of
    proxy requests along a chain of proxy servers.  See RFC 2616 (HTTP/1.1), section
    14.45 for an explanation of Via: header lines.
Off, which is the default, no special processing
    is performed. If a request or reply contains a Via: header,
    it is passed through unchanged.On, each request and reply will get a
    Via: header line added for the current host.Full, each generated Via: header
    line will additionally have the Apache server version shown as a
    Via: comment field.Block, every proxy request will have all its
    Via: header lines removed. No new Via: header will
    be generated.