Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4

| Description: | Provides for "trailing slash" redirects and serving directory index files | 
|---|---|
| Status: | Base | 
| Module Identifier: | dir_module | 
| Source File: | mod_dir.c | 
The index of a directory can come from one of two sources:
index.html. The DirectoryIndex directive sets the
      name of this file. This is controlled by
      mod_dir.mod_autoindex.The two functions are separated so that you can completely remove (or replace) automatic index generation should you want to.
A "trailing slash" redirect is issued when the server
    receives a request for a URL
    http://servername/foo/dirname where
    dirname is a directory. Directories require a
    trailing slash, so mod_dir issues a redirect to
    http://servername/foo/dirname/.
| Description: | Toggle how this module responds when another handler is configured | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | DirectoryCheckHandler On|Off | 
| Default: | DirectoryCheckHandler Off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | Indexes | 
| Status: | Base | 
| Module: | mod_dir | 
| Compatibility: | Available in 2.4.8 and later. Releases prior to 2.4 implicitly act as if "DirectoryCheckHandler ON" was specified. | 
The DirectoryCheckHandler directive determines 
    whether mod_dir should check for directory indexes or
    add trailing slashes when some other handler has been configured for
    the current URL.  Handlers can be set by directives such as 
    SetHandler or by other modules,
    such as mod_rewrite during per-directory substitutions.
    
 In releases prior to 2.4, this module did not take any action if any
    other handler was configured for a URL. This allows directory indexes to 
    be served even when a SetHandler directive is 
    specified for an entire directory, but it can also result in some conflicts
    with modules such as mod_rewrite.
| Description: | List of resources to look for when the client requests a directory | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | DirectoryIndex
    disabled | local-url [local-url] ... | 
| Default: | DirectoryIndex index.html | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | Indexes | 
| Status: | Base | 
| Module: | mod_dir | 
The DirectoryIndex directive sets the
    list of resources to look for, when the client requests an index
    of the directory by specifying a / at the end of the directory
    name.  Local-url is the (%-encoded) URL of a document on
    the server relative to the requested directory; it is usually the
    name of a file in the directory. Several URLs may be given, in
    which case the server will return the first one that it finds.  If
    none of the resources exist and the Indexes option is
    set, the server will generate its own listing of the
    directory.
DirectoryIndex index.html
then a request for http://example.com/docs/ would
    return http://example.com/docs/index.html if it
    exists, or would list the directory if it did not.
Note that the documents do not need to be relative to the directory;
DirectoryIndex index.html index.txt /cgi-bin/index.pl
would cause the CGI script /cgi-bin/index.pl to be
    executed if neither index.html or index.txt
    existed in a directory.
A single argument of "disabled" prevents mod_dir from
    searching for an index.  An argument of "disabled" will be interpreted
    literally if it has any arguments before or after it, even if they are "disabled"
    as well.
Note: Multiple DirectoryIndex
    directives within the same context will add
    to the list of resources to look for rather than replace:
    
# Example A: Set index.html as an index page, then add index.php to that list as well.
<Directory "/foo">
    DirectoryIndex index.html
    DirectoryIndex index.php
</Directory>
# Example B: This is identical to example A, except it's done with a single directive.
<Directory "/foo">
    DirectoryIndex index.html index.php
</Directory>
# Example C: To replace the list, you must explicitly reset it first:
# In this example, only index.php will remain as an index resource.
<Directory "/foo">
    DirectoryIndex index.html
    DirectoryIndex disabled
    DirectoryIndex index.php
</Directory>
| Description: | Configures an external redirect for directory indexes. | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | DirectoryIndexRedirect on | off | permanent | temp | seeother |
3xx-code
 | 
| Default: | DirectoryIndexRedirect off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | Indexes | 
| Status: | Base | 
| Module: | mod_dir | 
| Compatibility: | Available in version 2.3.14 and later | 
By default, the DirectoryIndex is selected
    and returned transparently to the client.  DirectoryIndexRedirect causes an external redirect
    to instead be issued.
The argument can be:
on: issues a 302 redirection to the index resource.off: does not issue a redirection. This is the legacy behaviour of mod_dir.permanent: issues a 301 (permanent) redirection to the index resource.temp: this has the same effect as onseeother: issues a 303 redirection (also known as "See Other") to the index resource.DirectoryIndexRedirect on
A request for http://example.com/docs/ would
    return a temporary redirect to http://example.com/docs/index.html
    if it exists.
| Description: | Toggle trailing slash redirects on or off | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | DirectorySlash On|Off | 
| Default: | DirectorySlash On | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | Indexes | 
| Status: | Base | 
| Module: | mod_dir | 
The DirectorySlash directive determines whether
    mod_dir should fixup URLs pointing to a directory or
    not.
Typically if a user requests a resource without a trailing slash, which
    points to a directory, mod_dir redirects him to the same
    resource, but with trailing slash for some good reasons:
mod_autoindex works correctly. Since it doesn't emit
    the path in the link, it would point to the wrong path.DirectoryIndex will be evaluated
    only for directories requested with trailing slash.If you don't want this effect and the reasons above don't apply to you, you can turn off the redirect as shown below. However, be aware that there are possible security implications to doing this.
# see security warning below!
<Location "/some/path">
    DirectorySlash Off
    SetHandler some-handler
</Location>
    Turning off the trailing slash redirect may result in an information
    disclosure. Consider a situation where mod_autoindex is
    active (Options +Indexes) and DirectoryIndex is set to a valid resource (say,
    index.html) and there's no other special handler defined for
    that URL. In this case a request with a trailing slash would show the
    index.html file. But a request without trailing slash
    would list the directory contents.
Also note that some browsers may erroneously change POST requests into GET (thus discarding POST data) when a redirect is issued.
| Description: | Define a default URL for requests that don't map to a file | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | FallbackResource disabled | local-url | 
| Default: | disabled - httpd will return 404 (Not Found) | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | Indexes | 
| Status: | Base | 
| Module: | mod_dir | 
| Compatibility: | The disabledargument is available in version 2.4.4 and
later | 
Use this to set a handler for any URL that doesn't map to anything in your filesystem, and would otherwise return HTTP 404 (Not Found). For example
FallbackResource /not-404.php
will cause requests for non-existent files to be handled by
    not-404.php, while requests for files that exist
    are unaffected.
It is frequently desirable to have a single file or resource handle all requests to a particular directory, except those requests that correspond to an existing file or script. This is often referred to as a 'front controller.'
In earlier versions of httpd, this effect typically required
    mod_rewrite, and the use of the -f and
    -d tests for file and directory existence. This now
    requires only one line of configuration.
FallbackResource /index.php
Existing files, such as images, css files, and so on, will be served normally.
Use the disabled argument to disable that feature
    if inheritance from a parent directory is not desired.
In a sub-URI, such as http://example.com/blog/ this sub-URI has to be supplied as local-url:
<Directory "/web/example.com/htdocs/blog">
    FallbackResource /blog/index.php
</Directory>
<Directory "/web/example.com/htdocs/blog/images">
    FallbackResource disabled
</Directory>