Mod expire » History » Revision 4
Revision 3 (Michael, 2006-08-14 09:53) → Revision 4/22 (Anonymous, 2006-08-14 09:56)
{{{ #!rst =============================================== Controlling the Expiration of Content in Caches =============================================== ------------------ Module: mod_expire ------------------ .. meta:: :keywords: lighttpd, expire .. contents:: Table of Contents Description =========== mod_expire controls the Expire header in the Response Header of HTTP/1.0 messages. It is usefull to set it for static files which should be cached aggressivly like images, stylesheets or similar. Options ======= expire.url assignes a expiration to all files below the specified path. The specification of the time is made up of: :: <access|modification> <number> <years|months|days|hours|minutes|seconds> following the syntax used by mod_expire in Apache 1.3.x and later. Example: :: expire.url = ( "/images/" => "access 1 hours" ) Troubleshoot }}} Troubleshooting ============ ======= It is known that mod_expire may not work due to an incorrect order of loading of modules. One instance is that mod_expire is loaded after mod_fastcgi. The solution is simple, it is to move mod_expire within the modules array in front of mod_fastcgi. Note: The order of the modules is loaded from top to bottom. Symptoms of the above scenario is the server starts up fine but fails to serve content. }}}