Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4

This document attempts to explain exactly what Apache HTTP Server does when deciding what virtual host to serve a request from.
Most users should read about Name-based vs. IP-based Virtual Hosts to decide which type they want to use, then read more about name-based or IP-based virtualhosts, and then see some examples.
If you want to understand all the details, then you can come back to this page.
There is a main server which consists of all the
definitions appearing outside of
<VirtualHost> sections.
There are virtual
servers, called vhosts, which are defined by
<VirtualHost>
sections.
Each VirtualHost directive includes one
or more addresses and optional ports.
Hostnames can be used in place of IP addresses in a virtual host definition, but they are resolved at startup and if any name resolutions fail, those virtual host definitions are ignored. This is, therefore, not recommended.
The address can be specified as
*, which will match a request if no
other vhost has the explicit address on which the request was
received.
The address appearing in the VirtualHost
directive can have an optional port. If the port is unspecified,
it is treated as a wildcard port, which can also be indicated
explicitly using *.
The wildcard port matches any port.
(Port numbers specified in the VirtualHost directive do
not influence what port numbers Apache will listen on, they only control
which VirtualHost will be selected to handle a request.
Use the Listen directive to
control the addresses and ports on which the server listens.)
Collectively the entire set of addresses (including multiple results from DNS lookups) are called the vhost's address set.
Apache automatically discriminates on the
basis of the HTTP Host header supplied by the client
whenever the most specific match for an IP address and port combination
is listed in multiple virtual hosts.
The
ServerName directive
may appear anywhere within the definition of a server. However,
each appearance overrides the previous appearance (within that
server). If no ServerName is specified, the server
attempts to deduce it from the server's IP address.
The first name-based vhost in the configuration file for a given IP:port pair is significant because it is used for all requests received on that address and port for which no other vhost for that IP:port pair has a matching ServerName or ServerAlias. It is also used for all SSL connections if the server does not support Server Name Indication.
The complete list of names in the VirtualHost
directive are treated just like a (non wildcard) ServerAlias
(but are not overridden by any ServerAlias statement).
For every vhost various default values are set. In particular:
ServerAdmin,
Timeout,
KeepAliveTimeout,
KeepAlive,
MaxKeepAliveRequests,
ReceiveBufferSize,
or SendBufferSize
directive then the respective value is inherited from the
main server. (That is, inherited from whatever the final
setting of that value is in the main server.)Essentially, the main server is treated as "defaults" or a "base" on which to build each vhost. But the positioning of these main server definitions in the config file is largely irrelevant -- the entire config of the main server has been parsed when this final merging occurs. So even if a main server definition appears after a vhost definition it might affect the vhost definition.
If the main server has no ServerName at this
point, then the hostname of the machine that httpd
is running on is used instead. We will call the main server address
set those IP addresses returned by a DNS lookup on the
ServerName of the main server.
For any undefined ServerName fields, a
name-based vhost defaults to the address given first in the
VirtualHost statement defining the vhost.
Any vhost that includes the magic _default_
wildcard is given the same ServerName as the
main server.
The server determines which vhost to use for a request in two phases: an IP-based match when the connection is established, then an optional name-based match when the request is received.
When a connection is first received, the server looks up the
destination IP address and port in its list of
VirtualHost addresses. This lookup follows a strict
priority order:
| Priority | Match type | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Exact IP address, exact port | <VirtualHost 10.0.0.1:80> |
| 2 | Exact IP address, wildcard port | <VirtualHost 10.0.0.1:*> |
| 3 | Wildcard address (*), exact port |
<VirtualHost *:80> |
| 4 | Wildcard address, wildcard port | <VirtualHost *:*> |
| 5 | Main server | (no matching VirtualHost) |
The server uses the first match found following this
priority order. Once a match is found at a given priority level,
no lower-priority levels are considered — even if a
lower-priority vhost has a ServerName that matches the
request's Host header. Name-based matching (Phase 2)
only occurs among vhosts that tied at the same priority level.
If there are VirtualHost definitions for
the IP address, the next step is to decide if we have to
deal with an IP-based or a name-based vhost.
If Phase 1 produces exactly one matching
VirtualHost, the request is served directly from that
vhost with no further matching.
If Phase 1 produces multiple VirtualHost
definitions at the same priority level, the server performs
name-based matching among those vhosts using the
Host: header from the request (or the SNI hostname
for SSL connections).
If the connection is using SSL, the server supports Server Name Indication, and
the SSL client handshake includes the TLS extension with the
requested hostname, then that hostname is used below just like the
Host: header would be used on a non-SSL connection.
Otherwise, the first name-based vhost whose address matched is
used for SSL connections. This is significant because the
vhost determines which certificate the server will use for the
connection.
The matching vhosts are searched in the order they appear in the configuration file:
ServerName and
ServerAlias of each vhost
are compared against the hostname from the request. The first
match wins.ServerName or ServerAlias
matches, the first vhost in the list is used. This is
the default name-based vhost for that address and port
combination.A Host: header field can contain a port number,
but Apache always ignores it and matches against the real port to
which the client sent the request.
If the request has no Host: header (such as a
HTTP/1.0 request), the first matching vhost is used. If a
ServerPath is configured for
any of the matching vhosts and the request URL matches that path,
the request is served from that vhost instead. This is a legacy
mechanism for HTTP/1.0 clients; see the
ServerPath example for
details.
The IP-based lookup (Phase 1) is performed only once for a particular TCP/IP session, while the name-based lookup (Phase 2) is performed on every request during a KeepAlive/persistent connection. In other words, a client may request pages from different name-based vhosts during a single persistent connection.
If the URI from the request is an absolute URI, and its hostname and port match the main server or one of the configured virtual hosts and match the address and port to which the client sent the request, then the scheme/hostname/port prefix is stripped off and the remaining relative URI is served by the corresponding main server or virtual host. If it does not match, then the URI remains untouched and the request is taken to be a proxy request.
*" as the address of every virtual host, and name-based virtual hosting
is applied across all configured virtual hosts.ServerName and ServerAlias
checks are never performed for an IP-based vhost (one where
there is only a single vhost for that IP:port).Host: header field is never used during the
matching process. Apache always uses the real port to which
the client sent the request.* vhost). In other words, the main server
only catches a request for an unspecified address/port
combination (unless there is a _default_ vhost
which matches that port).VirtualHost directives because it will force
your server to rely on DNS to boot. Furthermore it poses a
security threat if you do not control the DNS for all the
domains listed. There's more
information available on this and the next two
topics.ServerName should always be set for each
vhost. Otherwise a DNS lookup is required for each
vhost.In addition to the tips on the DNS Issues page, here are some further tips:
VirtualHost definitions. (This is to aid the
readability of the configuration -- the post-config merging
process makes it non-obvious that definitions mixed in around
virtual hosts might affect all virtual hosts.)