This is a very rough document that was probably out of date the moment it was written. It attempts to explain exactly what the code does when deciding what virtual host to serve a hit from. It's provided on the assumption that something is better than nothing. The server version under discussion is Apache 1.2.
If you just want to "make it work" without understanding how, there's a What Works section at the bottom.
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.
The directives Port, ServerName, ServerPath, and ServerAlias can appear anywhere within the definition of a server. However, each appearance overrides the previous appearance (within that server).
The default value of the Port
field for main_server
is 80. The main_server has no default ServerName
,
ServerPath
, or ServerAlias
.
In the absence of any
Listen
directives, the (final if there
are multiple) Port
directive in the main_server indicates
which port httpd will listen on.
The Port
and ServerName
directives for
any server main or virtual are used when generating URLs such as during
redirects.
Each address appearing in the VirtualHost
directive
can have an optional port. If the port is unspecified it defaults to
the value of the main_server's most recent Port
statement.
The special port * indicates a wildcard that matches any port.
Collectively the entire set of addresses (including multiple
A record
results from DNS lookups) are called the vhost's address set.
The magic _default_
address has significance during
the matching algorithm. It essentially matches any unspecified address.
After parsing the VirtualHost
directive, the vhost server
is given a default Port
equal to the port assigned to the
first name in its VirtualHost
directive. The complete
list of names in the VirtualHost
directive are treated
just like a ServerAlias
(but are not overridden by any
ServerAlias
statement). Note that subsequent Port
statements for this vhost will not affect the ports assigned in the
address set.
All vhosts are stored in a list which is in the reverse order that they appeared in the config file. For example, if the config file is:
Then the list will be ordered: main_server, C, B, A. Keep this in mind.<VirtualHost A> ... </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost B> ... </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost C> ... </VirtualHost>
After parsing has completed, the list of servers is scanned, and various merges and default values are set. In particular:
ServerAdmin
,
ResourceConfig
,
AccessConfig
,
Timeout
,
KeepAliveTimeout
,
KeepAlive
,
MaxKeepAliveRequests
,
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.)
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.
Now a pass is made through the vhosts to fill in any missing
ServerName
fields and to classify the vhost as either
an IP-based vhost or a name-based vhost. A vhost is
considered a name-based vhost if any of its address set overlaps the
main_server (the port associated with each address must match the
main_server's Port
). Otherwise it is considered an IP-based
vhost.
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. Otherwise the vhost (which is necessarily an IP-based
vhost) is given a ServerName
based on the result of a reverse
DNS lookup on the first address given in the VirtualHost
statement.
The server determines which vhost to use for a request as follows:
find_virtual_server
: When the connection is first made
by the client, the local IP address (the IP address to which the client
connected) is looked up in the server list. A vhost is matched if it
is an IP-based vhost, the IP address matches and the port matches
(taking into account wildcards).
If no vhosts are matched then the last occurrence, if it appears, of a _default_ address (which if you recall the ordering of the server list mentioned above means that this would be the first occurrence of _default_ in the config file) is matched.
In any event, if nothing above has matched, then the main_server is matched.
The vhost resulting from the above search is stored with data about the connection. We'll call this the connection vhost. The connection vhost is constant over all requests in a particular TCP/IP session -- that is, over all requests in a KeepAlive/persistent session.
For each request made on the connection the following sequence of events further determines the actual vhost that will be used to serve the request.
check_fulluri
: If the requestURI is an absoluteURI, that
is it includes http://hostname/
, then an attempt is made to
determine if the hostname's address (and optional port) match that of
the connection vhost. If it does then the hostname portion of the URI
is saved as the request_hostname. If it does not match, then the
URI remains untouched. Note: to achieve this address
comparison,
the hostname supplied goes through a DNS lookup unless it matches the
ServerName
or the local IP address of the client's socket.
parse_uri
: If the URI begins with a protocol
(i.e., http:
, ftp:
) then the request is
considered a proxy request. Note that even though we may have stripped
an http://hostname/
in the previous step, this could still
be a proxy request.
read_request
: If the request does not have a hostname
from the earlier step, then any Host:
header sent by the
client is used as the request hostname.
check_hostalias
: If the request now has a hostname,
then an attempt is made to match for this hostname. The first step
of this match is to compare any port, if one was given in the request,
against the Port
field of the connection vhost. If there's
a mismatch then the vhost used for the request is the connection vhost.
(This is a bug, see observations.)
If the port matches, then httpd scans the list of vhosts starting with the next server after the connection vhost. This scan does not stop if there are any matches, it goes through all possible vhosts, and in the end uses the last match it found. The comparisons performed are as follows:
ServerName
and Port
.
VirtualHost
directive for this vhost.
ServerAlias
given for the vhost.
check_serverpath
: If the request has no hostname
(back up a few paragraphs) then a scan similar to the one
in check_hostalias
is performed to match any
ServerPath
directives given in the vhosts. Note that the
last match is used regardless (again consider the ordering of
the virtual hosts).
ServerName
for the main_server that does not match the
machine's IPs.
check_hostalias
and
check_serverpath
no check is made that the vhost being
scanned is actually a name-based vhost. This means, for example, that
it's possible to match an IP-based vhost through another address. But
because the scan starts in the vhost list at the first vhost that
matched the local IP address of the connection, not all IP-based vhosts
can be matched.
Consider the config file above with three vhosts A, B, C. Suppose that B is a named-based vhost, and A and C are IP-based vhosts. If a request comes in on B or C's address containing a header "Host: A" then it will be served from A's config. If a request comes in on A's address then it will always be served from A's config regardless of any Host: header.
find_virtual_server
phase above no
named-based vhost will be matched, so the main_server will remain the
connection vhost. Then scans will cover all vhosts in the vhost list.
If you do have a _default_ vhost, then you cannot place
named-based vhosts after it in the config. This is because on any
connection to the main server IPs the connection vhost will always be
the _default_ vhost since none of the name-based are
considered during find_virtual_server
.
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.
ServerName
(or to generate that if it isn't specified
in the config).
ServerPath
directive exists which is a prefix of
another ServerPath
directive that appears later in
the configuration file, then the former will always be matched
and the latter will never be matched. (That is assuming that no
Host header was available to disambiguate the two.)
Port
statement that doesn't match the main_server
Port
then it will be considered an IP-based vhost.
Then find_virtual_server
will match it (because
the ports associated with each address in the address set default
to the port of the main_server) as the connection vhost. Then
check_hostalias
will refuse to check any other name-based
vhost because of the port mismatch. The result is that the vhost
will steal all hits going to the main_server address.
ServerName
resolves to the wrong address
then all the name-based vhosts will be parsed as ip-based vhosts.
Then the last of them will steal all the hits.
In addition to the tips on the DNS Issues page, here are some further tips:
ServerPaths
which are prefixes of other
ServerPaths
. If you cannot avoid this then you have to
ensure that the longer (more specific) prefix vhost appears earlier in
the configuration file than the shorter (less specific) prefix
(i.e., "ServerPath /abc" should appear after
"ServerPath /abcdef").