Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4

.htaccess files provide a way to make configuration
changes on a per-directory basis, without modifying the main server
configuration files directly.

.htaccess files
What they are/How to use them
When (not) to use .htaccess files
How directives are applied
Authentication example
Server Side Includes example
Rewrite Rules in .htaccess files
CGI example
Troubleshooting| Related Modules | Related Directives |
|---|---|
.htaccess files (or "distributed configuration files")
provide a way to make configuration changes on a per-directory basis. A
file, containing one or more configuration directives, is placed in a
particular document directory, and the directives apply to that
directory, and all subdirectories thereof.
If you want to call your .htaccess file something
else, you can change the name of the file using the AccessFileName directive. For example,
if you would rather call the file .config then you
can put the following in your server configuration file:
AccessFileName ".config"
Directives in .htaccess files use the same syntax as
in the main configuration
files. What you are permitted to put in these files is determined by the
AllowOverride and
AllowOverrideList directives.
AllowOverride specifies, in
categories, what directives will be honored if they are found in a
.htaccess file, while AllowOverrideList names individual
directives to permit (see below). If a directive
is permitted, the documentation for that directive will contain an Override section,
specifying what value must be in AllowOverride in order for that
directive to be permitted.
For example, if you look at the documentation for the AddDefaultCharset
directive, you will find that it is permitted in .htaccess
files. (See the Context line in the directive summary.) The Override line reads
FileInfo. Thus, you must have at least
AllowOverride FileInfo in order for this directive to be
honored in .htaccess files.
If you have access to the main server configuration file, you
should put all of your configuration there instead of in
.htaccess files. This includes user authentication,
mod_rewrite rules, and anything else you might be
tempted to put in .htaccess. Directives in the main
configuration are loaded once at server start, rather than on every
request, and mod_rewrite in particular works better
in server configuration context.
.htaccess files should be used in a case where the
content providers need to make configuration changes to the server on a
per-directory basis, but do not have root access on the server system.
This is common with managed hosting environments, control-panel-based
hosting (such as cPanel or Plesk), and content management systems where
the application ships a .htaccess file as part of its
distribution. In the event that the server administrator is not willing
to make frequent configuration changes, it might be desirable to permit
individual users to make these changes in .htaccess files
for themselves.
There are two reasons to prefer the main configuration file
over .htaccess: performance and security.
Performance: When AllowOverride
is set to allow the use of .htaccess files, httpd will
look in every directory for .htaccess files. Thus,
permitting .htaccess files causes a performance hit,
whether or not you actually even use them! Also, the
.htaccess file is loaded every time a document is
requested.
Further note that httpd must look for .htaccess files
in all higher-level directories, in order to have a full complement of
directives that it must apply. (See section on how
directives are applied.) Thus, if a file is requested out of a
directory /www/htdocs/example, httpd must look for the
following files:
/.htaccess /www/.htaccess /www/htdocs/.htaccess /www/htdocs/example/.htaccess
And so, for each file access out of that directory, there are 4
additional file-system accesses, even if none of those files are
present. (Note that this would only be the case if
.htaccess files were enabled for /, which
is not usually the case.)
Security: You are permitting
users to modify server configuration, which may result in changes over
which you have no control. Carefully consider whether you want to give
your users this privilege. Note also that giving users less
privileges than they need will lead to additional technical support
requests. Make sure you clearly tell your users what level of
privileges you have given them. Specifying exactly what you have set
AllowOverride to, and pointing them
to the relevant documentation, will save yourself a lot of confusion
later.
If you need to grant .htaccess access but want to
limit it to specific directives rather than entire categories, use the
AllowOverrideList directive. This
lets you name individual directives that are permitted, providing
finer-grained control than AllowOverride alone:
# Allow only specific directives, not entire categories AllowOverride None AllowOverrideList Redirect RedirectMatch RewriteEngine RewriteRule RewriteCond
With this configuration, any directive not explicitly listed will
cause a server error if encountered in a .htaccess file.
This is a useful middle ground between full override access and no
override access.
Note that it is completely equivalent to put a .htaccess
file in a directory /www/htdocs/example containing a
directive, and to put that same directive in a Directory section
<Directory "/www/htdocs/example"> in your main server
configuration:
.htaccess file in /www/htdocs/example:
/www/htdocs/exampleAddType text/example ".exm"
httpd.conf
file<Directory "/www/htdocs/example">
AddType text/example ".exm"
</Directory>
The use of .htaccess files can be disabled completely
by setting the AllowOverride
directive to none:
AllowOverride None
The configuration directives found in a .htaccess file
are applied to the directory in which the .htaccess file
is found, and to all subdirectories thereof. However, it is important
to also remember that there may have been .htaccess files
in directories higher up. Directives are applied in the order that they
are found. Therefore, a .htaccess file in a particular
directory may override directives found in .htaccess files
found higher up in the directory tree. And those, in turn, may have
overridden directives found yet higher up, or in the main server
configuration file itself.
Example:
In the directory /www/htdocs/example1 we have a
.htaccess file containing the following:
Options +ExecCGI
(Note: you must have "AllowOverride Options" in effect
to permit the use of the "Options" directive in
.htaccess files.)
In the directory /www/htdocs/example1/example2 we have
a .htaccess file containing:
Options Includes
Because of this second .htaccess file, in the directory
/www/htdocs/example1/example2, CGI execution is not
permitted, as only Options Includes is in effect, which
completely overrides any earlier setting that may have been in
place.
As discussed in the documentation on Configuration Sections,
.htaccess files can override the <Directory> sections for
the corresponding directory, but will be overridden by other types
of configuration sections from the main configuration files. This
fact can be used to enforce certain configurations, even in the
presence of a liberal AllowOverride setting. For example, to
prevent script execution while allowing anything else to be set in
.htaccess you can use:
<Directory "/www/htdocs">
AllowOverride All
</Directory>
<Location "/">
Options +IncludesNoExec -ExecCGI
</Location>
DocumentRoot is /www/htdocs.As with any .htaccess use, placing these directives in
a <Directory> block is
preferred when you have access to the main configuration (see
above). The following example shows the
.htaccess approach:
.htaccess file contents:
AuthType Basic AuthName "Password Required" AuthUserFile "/www/passwords/password.file" AuthGroupFile "/www/passwords/group.file" Require group admins
Note that AllowOverride AuthConfig must be in effect
for these directives to have any effect.
Please see the authentication tutorial for a more complete discussion of authentication and authorization.
Another use of .htaccess files is to enable Server Side
Includes for a particular directory. This may be done with the following
configuration directives, placed in a .htaccess file in
the desired directory:
Options +Includes AddType text/html "shtml" AddHandler server-parsed shtml
Note that AllowOverride Options and AllowOverride
FileInfo must both be in effect for these directives to have any
effect.
Please see the SSI tutorial for a more complete discussion of server-side includes.
When using RewriteRule in
.htaccess files, be aware that the per-directory context
changes things a bit. In particular, rules are taken to be relative to
the current directory, rather than being the original requested URI.
Consider the following examples:
# In httpd.conf RewriteRule "^/images/(.+)\.jpg" "/images/$1.png" # In .htaccess in root dir RewriteRule "^images/(.+)\.jpg" "images/$1.png" # In .htaccess in images/ RewriteRule "^(.+)\.jpg" "$1.png"
In a .htaccess in your document directory, the leading
slash is removed from the value supplied to RewriteRule, and in the
images subdirectory, /images/ is removed from
it. Thus, your regular expression needs to omit that portion as
well.
Also note that in .htaccess context, regular expressions are
recompiled on every request, whereas in the main server configuration they
are compiled once and cached.
Consult the mod_rewrite documentation for
further details on using mod_rewrite.
mod_proxy_fcgi with a
FastCGI application server, or a framework-specific handler. The
information below remains useful for environments that still rely on
traditional CGI.You may wish to use a .htaccess file to permit the
execution of CGI programs in a particular directory. This may be
implemented with the following configuration:
Options +ExecCGI AddHandler cgi-script "cgi" "py"
Alternately, if you wish to have all files in the given directory be considered to be CGI programs, this may be done with the following configuration:
Options +ExecCGI SetHandler cgi-script
Note that AllowOverride Options and AllowOverride
FileInfo must both be in effect for these directives to have any
effect.
Please see the CGI tutorial for a more complete discussion of CGI programming and configuration.
When you put configuration directives in a .htaccess
file, and you don't get the desired effect, there are a number of
things that may be going wrong.
Most commonly, the problem is that AllowOverride is not
set such that your configuration directives are being honored. Make
sure that you don't have a AllowOverride None in effect
for the file scope in question. A good test for this is to put a
nonsense word in your .htaccess file and reload the
page:
TestMe
If a server error (HTTP 500) is
not generated, then you almost certainly have AllowOverride
None in effect.
If, on the other hand, you are getting server errors when trying to
access documents, check your httpd error log. It will likely tell you
that the directive used in your .htaccess file is not
permitted.
[Tue May 06 09:12:31.528374 2025] [core:alert] [pid 12345] [client 192.168.1.50:54321] /var/www/html/.htaccess: DirectoryIndex not allowed here
This will indicate either that you've used a directive that is
never permitted in .htaccess files, or that you simply
don't have AllowOverride set to
a level sufficient for the directive you've used. Consult the
documentation for that particular directive to determine which is
the case.
Alternately, it may tell you that you had a syntax error in your usage of the directive itself.
[Tue May 06 09:14:02.946218 2025] [core:alert] [pid 12345] [client 192.168.1.50:54321] /var/www/html/.htaccess: RewriteCond: bad flag delimiters
In this case, the error message should be specific to the particular syntax error that you have committed.