.htaccess boilerplate configs for MyDevil hosting
npm install htaccess-configs-mydevil
MyDevil .htaccess Configs is a collection of configuration snippets that can help
your server improve the web site's performance and security, while also
ensuring that resources are served with the correct content-type and are
accessible, if needed, even cross-domain.
This is a fork of the Apache Server Configs prepared for MyDevil hosting.
There are a few options for getting the MyDevil .htaccess configs:
* Download the zip archive
* Install them via npm:
npm install --save-dev htaccess-configs-mydevil
Inside the dist/ folder, you'll find a ready-to-use .htaccess file.
Copy the .htaccess
file in the root of the website.
Security, mime-type, and caching best practices evolve, and so should do your .htaccess file. In the past, with each new MyDevil .htaccess Configs release it was quite tedious to find out which .htaccess trick was just new or only had changes in certain nuances.
The build script with its re-usable and customizable build configuration lets you easily update your .htaccess file. Each new .htaccess build will contain the updated MyDevil .htaccess Configs source files, enabled or commented-out according to your settings in the htaccess.conf of your project root.
Allows you to define which module to enable or disable for your project. Just copy the default htaccess.conf from this repo into your project directory. Adjust to your needs, and/or add custom code snippets you need for your project. Its syntax is straight and pretty much self-explanatory:
``Example Module
title "example module"
enable "src/example-module/images.conf"
enable "src/example-module/web_fonts.conf"
disable "src/example-module/not-needed.conf"
omit "src/example-module/not-needed-at-all.conf"
... more modules ...
`
#### Disabling modules
For example, the “Cross-origin web fonts” snippet is always included in our pre-built .htaccess file and enabled. If your project does not deal with web fonts, you can disable or omit this section:
This will comment out the section:
``
disable "src/cross-origin/web_fonts.conf"
…and this will exclude the section, saving lines in output:
``
omit "src/cross-origin/web_fonts.conf"
#### Enabling modules
For example, the “Forcing https://” snippet is disabled by default, although being included in our pre-built .htaccess. To enable this snippet, change the disable keyword to enable:
``
enable "src/rewrites/rewrite_http_to_https.conf"
#### Adding custom modules
Imagine you're passing all requests to non-existing files to your favourite web framework. The according mod_rewrite snippet would go like this:
``
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteRule ^ index.php [QSA,L]
Store this snippet in a file, e.g. config/framework_rewrites.conf, and add a reference in your htaccess.conf:
``PROJECT MODULES
enable "config/framework_rewrites.conf"
Dive into your project root and call the build script from wherever you cloned the repo. Here are three examples:
1. Create a default .htaccess
in current work directory. An existing htaccess.conf in this directory will be used; if none is present, the default configuration will apply.
`bash
$ path/to/htaccess-configs-mydevil/bin/build.sh
2. Custom output location
Just add output path and filename as parameter. By the way, if there's an existing .htaccess file, the build script will create a backup.
`bash
$ path/to/htaccess-configs-mydevil/bin/build.sh htdocs/.htaccess
[✔] Build .htaccess
[✔] Create backup: 'htdocs/.htaccess~'
[✔] Moved in place: 'htdocs/.htaccess'
`3. Custom .htaccess configuration
Why not maintain your personal ~/htaccess.conf? This example creates a .htaccess in current work directory, according to your favourite settings you may have stored in your
$HOME directory:`bash
$ path/to/htaccess-configs-mydevil/bin/build.sh ./.htaccess ~/htaccess.conf
`
Support
* ### __MyDevil hosting__
* ### __Apache v2.4.0+__
* ### __Browsers:__
* Chrome
* Firefox 4+
* Internet Explorer 8+
* Opera 12+
* Safari 5+
$3
#### Custom error messages/pages
MyDevil does not support `ErrorDocument`. However, there is a workaround. You can create custom error pages in directory `/errors/xxx.html` when xxx is HTTP code.Link to the official documentation (in polish): Własne strony błędów
#### Disable TRACE HTTP Method
Due to the lack of access to the main configuration, the option is not available.
#### Server-side technology information
MyDevil does not support
`Header unset`. There is no workaround at the moment.#### ServerTokens Prod
Due to the lack of access to the main configuration, the option is not available.
#### Compression
MyDevil does not support
`AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE`. However, there is a workaround. You can enable GZIP compression at your page settings.Link to the official documentation (in polish): Strona WWW/PHP
#### Brotli/GZip pre-compressed content
Due to the lack of compression, the option is also not available.
#### ETags
MyDevil does not support
`Header unset`. There is no workaround at the moment.#### File concatenation
MyDevil does not support
`
Options +Includes
AddOutputFilterByType INCLUDES
SetOutputFilter INCLUDES
``Anyone is welcome to contribute,
however, if you decide to get involved, please take a moment to review
the guidelines:
* Bug reports
* Feature requests
* Pull requests
MyDevil .htaccess Configs is only possible thanks to all the awesome
contributors!
Apache Server Configs is only possible thanks to all the awesome
contributors!
The code is available under the MIT license.