Apache Module mod_mime
Summary
    This module is used to associate various bits of "meta
    information" with files by their filename extensions. This
    information relates the filename of the document to it's
    mime-type, language, character set and encoding. This
    information is sent to the browser, and participates in content
    negotiation, so the user's preferences are respected when
    choosing one of several possible files to serve. See
    mod_negotiation for more information
    about content negotiation.
    The directives AddCharset, AddEncoding, AddLanguage and AddType are all used to map file
    extensions onto the meta-information for that file. Respectively
    they set the character set, content-encoding, content-language,
    and MIME-type (content-type) of documents.  The directive TypesConfig is used to specify a
    file which also maps extensions onto MIME types. 
    In addition, mod_mime may define the handler and filters that originate and process
    content.  The directives AddHandler, AddOutputFilter, and AddInputFilter control the modules
    or scripts that serve the document.  The MultiviewsMatch directive allows
    mod_negotiation to consider these file extensions
    to be included when testing Multiviews matches.
    While mod_mime associates meta-information
    with filename extensions, the core server
    provides directives that are used to associate all the files in a
    given container (e.g., <Location>, <Directory>, or <Files>) with particular
    meta-information. These directives include ForceType, SetHandler, SetInputFilter, and SetOutputFilter.  The core directives
    override any filename extension mappings defined in
    mod_mime.
    Note that changing the meta-information for a file does not
    change the value of the Last-Modified header.
    Thus, previously cached copies may still be used by a client or
    proxy, with the previous headers. If you change the
    meta-information (language, content type, character set or
    encoding) you may need to 'touch' affected files (updating
    their last modified date) to ensure that all visitors are
    receive the corrected content headers.
Directives
Topics
See also

    Files can have more than one extension, and the order of the
    extensions is normally irrelevant. For example, if the
    file welcome.html.fr maps onto content type
    text/html and language French then the file
    welcome.fr.html will map onto exactly the same information.
    If more than one extension is given which maps onto the same
    type of meta-information, then the one to the right will be
    used, except for languages and content encodings. For example, if
    .gif maps to the MIME-type image/gif and
    .html maps to the MIME-type text/html, then the
    file welcome.gif.html will be associated with the MIME-type
    text/html.
    Languages and content encodings are treated accumulative, because one can assign
    more than one language or encoding to a particular ressource. For example,
    the file welcome.html.en.de will be delivered with
    Content-Language: en, de and Content-Type:
    text/html.
    Care should be taken when a file with multiple extensions
    gets associated with both a MIME-type and a handler. This will
    usually result in the request being by the module associated
    with the handler. For example, if the .imap
    extension is mapped to the handler imap-file (from
    mod_imap) and the .html extension is
    mapped to the MIME-type text/html, then the file
    world.imap.html will be associated with both the
    imap-file handler and text/html MIME-type.
    When it is processed, the imap-file handler will be used,
    and so it will be treated as a mod_imap imagemap
    file.
 
    A file of a particular MIME type can additionally be encoded a
    particular way to simplify transmission over the Internet.
    While this usually will refer to compression, such as
    gzip, it can also refer to encryption, such a
    pgp or to an encoding such as UUencoding, which is
    designed for transmitting a binary file in an ASCII (text)
    format.
    The HTTP/1.1
    RFC, section 14.11 puts it this way:
    
      The Content-Encoding entity-header field is used as a modifier to
      the media-type. When present, its value indicates what additional
      content codings have been applied to the entity-body, and thus what
      decoding mechanisms must be applied in order to obtain the media-type
      referenced by the Content-Type header field. Content-Encoding is
      primarily used to allow a document to be compressed without losing
      the identity of its underlying media type.
    
    By using more than one file extension (see section above about multiple file
    extensions), you can indicate that a file is of a
    particular type, and also has a particular
    encoding. 
    For example, you may have a file which is a Microsoft Word
    document, which is pkzipped to reduce its size. If the
    .doc extension is associated with the Microsoft
    Word file type, and the .zip extension is
    associated with the pkzip file encoding, then the file
    Resume.doc.zip would be known to be a pkzip'ed Word
    document.
    Apache sends a Content-encoding header with the
    resource, in order to tell the client browser about the
    encoding method.
    
 
    In addition to file type and the file encoding,
    another important piece of information is what language a
    particular document is in, and in what character set the file
    should be displayed. For example, the document might be written
    in the Vietnamese alphabet, or in Cyrillic, and should be
    displayed as such. This information, also, is transmitted in
    HTTP headers.
    The character set, language, encoding and mime type are all 
    used in the process of content negotiation (See 
    mod_negotiation) to determine
    which document to give to the client, when there are
    alternative documents in more than one character set, language, 
    encoding or mime type. All filename extensions associations
    created with AddCharset,
    AddEncoding, AddLanguage and AddType directives
    (and extensions listed in the MimeMagicFile) participate in this select process.
    Filename extensions that are only associated using the AddHandler, AddInputFilter or AddOutputFilter directives may be included or excluded
    from matching by using the MultiviewsMatch directive.
    
      To convey this further information, Apache optionally sends
      a Content-Language header, to specify the language
      that the document is in, and can append additional information
      onto the Content-Type header to indicate the
      particular character set that should be used to correctly
      render the information.
      
        Content-Language: en, fr
	Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
      
The language specification is the two-letter abbreviation
      for the language. The charset is the name of the
      particular character set which should be used.
    
 

    The AddCharset directive maps the given
    filename extensions to the specified content charset. charset
    is the MIME charset parameter of filenames containing
    extension. This mapping is added to any already in force,
    overriding any mappings that already exist for the same
    extension.
    Example
      AddLanguage ja .ja
      AddCharset EUC-JP .euc
      AddCharset ISO-2022-JP .jis
      AddCharset SHIFT_JIS .sjis
    
Then the document xxxx.ja.jis will be treated
    as being a Japanese document whose charset is ISO-2022-JP
    (as will the document xxxx.jis.ja). The
    AddCharset directive is useful for both to
    inform the client about the character encoding of the document so that
    the document can be interpreted and displayed appropriately, and for content negotiation,
    where the server returns one from several documents based on
    the client's charset preference.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
See also
 

    The AddEncoding directive maps the given
    filename extensions to the specified encoding type. MIME-enc
    is the MIME encoding to use for documents containing the
    extension. This mapping is added to any already in force,
    overriding any mappings that already exist for the same
    extension.
    Example
      AddEncoding x-gzip .gz
      AddEncoding x-compress .Z
    
This will cause filenames containing the .gz extension
    to be marked as encoded using the x-gzip encoding, and
    filenames containing the .Z extension to be marked as
    encoded with x-compress.
    Old clients expect x-gzip and x-compress,
    however the standard dictates that they're equivalent to
    gzip and compress respectively. Apache does
    content encoding comparisons by ignoring any leading x-.
    When responding with an encoding Apache will use whatever form
    (i.e., x-foo or foo) the
    client requested. If the client didn't specifically request a
    particular form Apache will use the form given by the
    AddEncoding directive. To make this long story
    short, you should always use x-gzip and
    x-compress for these two specific encodings. More
    recent encodings, such as deflate should be
    specified without the x-.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
 

    Files having the name extension will be served by the
    specified handler-name. This
    mapping is added to any already in force, overriding any mappings that
    already exist for the same extension. For example, to
    activate CGI scripts with the file extension .cgi, you
    might use:
    
      AddHandler cgi-script .cgi
    
Once that has been put into your httpd.conf file, any file containing
    the .cgi extension will be treated as a CGI program.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
See also
 

| Description: | Maps filename extensions to the filters that will process
client requests | 
|---|
| Syntax: | AddInputFilter filter[;filter...]
extension [extension] ... | 
|---|
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
|---|
| Override: | FileInfo | 
|---|
| Status: | Base | 
|---|
| Module: | mod_mime | 
|---|
| Compatibility: | AddInputFilter is only available in Apache 2.0.26 and
later. | 
|---|
    AddInputFilter maps the filename extension
    extension to the filters which
    will process client requests and POST input when they are received by
    the server. This is in addition to any filters defined elsewhere,
    including the SetInputFilter
    directive. This mapping is merged over any already in force, overriding
    any mappings that already exist for the same extension.
    If more than one filter is specified, they must be separated
    by semicolons in the order in which they should process the
    content. Both the filter and extension arguments are
    case-insensitive, and the extension may be specified with or
    without a leading dot.
 

    The AddLanguage directive maps the given
    filename extension to the specified content language.
    MIME-lang is the MIME language of filenames containing
    extension. This mapping is added to any already in force,
    overriding any mappings that already exist for the same
    extension.
    Example
      AddEncoding x-compress .Z
      AddLanguage en .en
      AddLanguage fr .fr
    
Then the document xxxx.en.Z will be treated as
    being a compressed English document (as will the document
    xxxx.Z.en). Although the content language is
    reported to the client, the browser is unlikely to use this
    information. The AddLanguage directive is
    more useful for content
    negotiation, where the server returns one from several documents
    based on the client's language preference.
    If multiple language assignments are made for the same
    extension, the last one encountered is the one that is used.
    That is, for the case of:
    
      AddLanguage en .en
      AddLanguage en-uk .en
      AddLanguage en-us .en
    
documents with the extension .en would be treated as
    being en-us.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
See also
 

| Description: | Maps filename extensions to the filters that will process
responses from the server | 
|---|
| Syntax: | AddOutputFilter filter[;filter...]
extension [extension] ... | 
|---|
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
|---|
| Override: | FileInfo | 
|---|
| Status: | Base | 
|---|
| Module: | mod_mime | 
|---|
| Compatibility: | AddOutputFilter is only available in Apache 2.0.26 and
later. | 
|---|
    The AddOutputFilter directive maps the
    filename extension extension to the filters which will process responses
    from the server before they are sent to the client. This is in
    addition to any filters defined elsewhere, including SetOutputFilter and AddOutputFilterByType directive. This mapping is merged
    over any already in force, overriding any mappings that already exist
    for the same extension.
    For example, the following configuration will process all
    .shtml files for server-side includes and will then
    compress the output using mod_deflate.
    
      AddOutputFilter INCLUDES;DEFLATE shtml
    
If more than one filter is specified, they must be separated
    by semicolons in the order in which they should process the
    content. Both the filter and extension arguments
    are case-insensitive, and the extension may be specified with or
    without a leading dot.
See also
 

    The AddType directive maps the given filename
    extensions onto the specified content type. MIME-type is the
    MIME type to use for filenames containing extension. This
    mapping is added to any already in force, overriding any mappings that
    already exist for the same extension. This directive can
    be used to add mappings not listed in the MIME types file (see the
    TypesConfig directive).
    
    Example
      AddType image/gif .gif
    
      It is recommended that new MIME types be added using the
      
AddType directive rather than changing the 
      
TypesConfig file.
    
The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
See also
 

    The DefaultLanguage directive tells Apache
    that all files in the directive's scope (e.g., all files
    covered by the current <Directory> container) that don't have an explicit language
    extension (such as .fr or .de as configured
    by AddLanguage) should be
    considered to be in the specified MIME-lang language. This
    allows entire directories to be marked as containing Dutch content, for
    instance, without having to rename each file. Note that unlike using
    extensions to specify languages, DefaultLanguage
    can only specify a single language.
    If no DefaultLanguage directive is in force,
    and a file does not have any language extensions as configured
    by AddLanguage, then that file
    will be considered to have no language attribute.
    Example
      DefaultLanguage en
    
See also
 

    The ModMimeUsePathInfo directive is used to
    combine the filename with the path_info URL component to
    apply mod_mime's directives to the request. The default
    value is Off - therefore, the path_info
    component is ignored.
    This directive is recommended when you have a virtual filesystem.
    Example
      ModMimeUsePathInfo On
    
If you have a request for /bar/foo.shtml where
    /bar is a Location and ModMimeUsePathInfo is On,
    mod_mime will treat the incoming request as
    /bar/foo.shtml and directives like AddOutputFilter
    INCLUDES .shtml will add the INCLUDES filter to the
    request. If ModMimeUsePathInfo is not set, the
    INCLUDES filter will not be added.
See also
 

| Description: | The types of files that will be included when searching for
a matching file with MultiViews | 
|---|
| Syntax: | MultiviewsMatch Any|NegotiatedOnly|Filters|Handlers
[Handlers|Filters] | 
|---|
| Default: | MultiviewsMatch NegotiatedOnly | 
|---|
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
|---|
| Override: | FileInfo | 
|---|
| Status: | Base | 
|---|
| Module: | mod_mime | 
|---|
| Compatibility: | Available in Apache 2.0.26 and later. | 
|---|
    MultiviewsMatch permits three different
    behaviors for mod_negotiation's
    Multiviews feature.  Multiviews allows a request for a file,
    e.g. index.html, to match any negotiated
    extensions following the base request, e.g.
    index.html.en, index.html.fr, or
    index.html.gz.
    The NegotiatedOnly option provides that every extension
    following the base name must correlate to a recognized
    mod_mime extension for content negotation, e.g.
    Charset, Content-Type, Language, or Encoding.  This is the strictest
    implementation with the fewest unexpected side effects, and is the
    default behavior.
    To include extensions associated with Handlers and/or Filters,
    set the MultiviewsMatch directive to either
    Handlers, Filters, or both option keywords.
    If all other factors are equal, the smallest file will be served,
    e.g. in deciding between index.html.cgi of 500
    bytes and index.html.pl of 1000 bytes, the .cgi
    file would win in this example. Users of .asis files
    might prefer to use the Handler option, if .asis files are
    associated with the asis-handler.
    You may finally allow Any extensions to match, even if
    mod_mime doesn't recognize the extension. This was the
    behavior in Apache 1.3, and can cause unpredicatable results, such as
    serving .old or .bak files the webmaster never expected to be served.
    For example, the following configuration will allow handlers
    and filters to participate in Multviews, but will exclude unknown
    files:
    
      MultiviewsMatch Handlers Filters
    
See also
 

    The RemoveCharset directive removes any
    character set associations for files with the given extensions.
    This allows .htaccess files in subdirectories to
    undo any associations inherited from parent directories or the
    server config files.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
    Example
      RemoveCharset .html .shtml
    
 

    The RemoveEncoding directive removes any
    encoding associations for files with the given extensions. This
    allows .htaccess files in subdirectories to undo
    any associations inherited from parent directories or the
    server config files. An example of its use might be:
    /foo/.htaccess:
      AddEncoding x-gzip .gz
      AddType text/plain .asc
      <Files *.gz.asc>
      
        RemoveEncoding .gz
      
      </Files>
    
This will cause foo.gz to be marked as being
    encoded with the gzip method, but foo.gz.asc as an
    unencoded plaintext file.
    Note
      RemoveEncoding directives are processed
      after any AddEncoding
      directives, so it is possible they may undo the effects of the latter
      if both occur within the same directory configuration.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
 

    The RemoveHandler directive removes any
    handler associations for files with the given extensions. This allows
    .htaccess files in subdirectories to undo any
    associations inherited from parent directories or the server
    config files. An example of its use might be:
    /foo/.htaccess:
      AddHandler server-parsed .html
    
/foo/bar/.htaccess:
      RemoveHandler .html
    
This has the effect of returning .html files in
    the /foo/bar directory to being treated as normal
    files, rather than as candidates for parsing (see the mod_include module).
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
 

   
    The RemoveInputFilter directive removes any
    input filter associations for files with the given extensions.
    This allows .htaccess files in subdirectories to
    undo any associations inherited from parent directories or the
    server config files.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
 
    The RemoveLanguage directive removes any
    language associations for files with the given extensions. This
    allows .htaccess files in subdirectories to undo
    any associations inherited from parent directories or the
    server config files.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
 
    
    The RemoveOutputFilter directive removes any
    output filter associations for files with the given extensions.
    This allows .htaccess files in subdirectories to
    undo any associations inherited from parent directories or the
    server config files.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
    Example
      RemoveOutputFilter shtml
    
See also
 

    The RemoveType directive removes any MIME
    type associations for files with the given extensions. This allows
    .htaccess files in subdirectories to undo any
    associations inherited from parent directories or the server
    config files. An example of its use might be:
    /foo/.htaccess:
      RemoveType .cgi
    
This will remove any special handling of .cgi
    files in the /foo/ directory and any beneath it,
    causing the files to be treated as being of the DefaultType.
    Note
      RemoveType directives are processed
      after any AddType
      directives, so it is possible they may undo the effects of the
      latter if both occur within the same directory configuration.
    The extension argument is case-insensitive, and can
    be specified with or without a leading dot.
 

    The TypesConfig directive sets the location
    of the MIME types configuration file. File-path is relative
    to the ServerRoot. This file sets
    the default list of mappings from filename extensions to content
    types. Most administrators use the provided mime.types
    file, which associates common filename extensions with IANA registered
    content types. The current list is maintained at http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/media-types/media-types.
    This simplifies the httpd.conf file by providing the
    majority of media-type definitions, and may be overridden by
    AddType directives as
    needed. You should not edit the mime.types file, because
    it may be replaced when you upgrade your server.
    The file contains lines in the format of the arguments to
    an AddType directive:
    
      MIME-type [extension] ...
    
The case of the extension does not matter. Blank lines, and lines
    beginning with a hash character (#) are ignored.
    
      Please do not send requests to the Apache HTTP
      Server Project to add any new entries in the distributed
      mime.types file unless (1) they are already
      registered with IANA, and (2) they use widely accepted,
      non-conflicting filename extensions across platforms.
      category/x-subtype requests will be automatically
      rejected, as will any new two-letter extensions as they will
      likely conflict later with the already crowded language and
      character set namespace.
    
See also