Accessing any web document on server: http://my.host/cgi-bin/php/secret/doc.html
      
       The path information part of the URL after the PHP binary name,
       /secret/doc.html is
       conventionally used to specify the name of the file to be
       opened and interpreted by the CGI program.
       Usually some web server configuration directives (Apache:
       Action) are used to redirect requests to documents like
       http://my.host/secret/script.php to the
       PHP interpreter.  With this setup, the web server first checks
       the access permissions to the directory /secret, and after that creates the
       redirected request http://my.host/cgi-bin/php/secret/script.php.
       Unfortunately, if the request is originally given in this form,
       no access checks are made by web server for file /secret/script.php, but only for the
       /cgi-bin/php file.  This way
       any user able to access /cgi-bin/php is able to access any
       protected document on the web server.
      
       In PHP, compile-time configuration option --enable-force-cgi-redirect
       and runtime configuration directives doc_root and user_dir can be used to prevent
       this attack, if the server document tree has any directories
       with access restrictions.  See below for full the explanation
       of the different combinations.