This document explains how to install, configure and run Apache 1.3 under Microsoft Windows. Please note that at this time, Windows support is entirely experimental, and is recommended only for experienced users. The Apache Group does not guarantee that this software will work as documented, or even at all. If you find any bugs, or wish to contribute in other ways, please use our bug reporting page.
Warning: Apache on NT has not yet been optimized for performance. Apache still performs best, and is most reliable on Unix platforms. Over time we will improve NT performance. Folks doing comparative reviews of webserver performance are asked to compare against Apache on a Unix platform such as Solaris, FreeBSD, or Linux.
Most of this document assumes that you are installing Windows from a binary distribution. If you want to compile Apache yourself (possibly to help with development, or to track down bugs), see the section on Compiling Apache for Windows below.
If running on Windows 95, using the "Winsock2" upgrade is recommended but may not be necessary. If running on NT 4.0, installing Service Pack 2 is recommended.
Information on the latest version of Apache can be found on the Apache web server at http://www.apache.org/. This will list the current release, any more recent alpha or beta-test releases, together with details of mirror web and anonymous ftp sites.
You should download the version of Apache for Windows with the
.exe
extension. This is a single file containing Apache,
ready to install and run. There may also be a .zip
file
containing the source code, to compile Apache yourself. (If there is
no .zip file, the source will be available in a
.tar.gz file but this will contain Unix line endings. You
will have to convert at least the .mak and
.dsp files to have DOS line endings before MSVC will
understand them).
\Program Files\Apache Group\Apache
although you can
change this to any other directory)
During the installation, Apache will configure the files in the conf directory for your chosen installation directory. However if any of the files in this directory already exist they will not be overwritten. Instead the new copy of the corresponding file will be left with the extension .default. So, for example, if conf\httpd.conf already exists it will not be altered, but the version which would have been installed will be left in conf\httpd.conf.default. After the installation has finished you should manually check to see what in new in the .default file, and if necessary update your existing configuration files.
Also, if you already have a file called htdocs\index.html then it will not be overwritten (no index.html.default file will be installed either). This should mean it a safe to install Apache over an existing installation (but you will have to stop the existing server running before doing the installation, then start the new one after the installation is finished).
After installing Apache, you should edit the configuration files in the conf directory as required. These files will be configured during the install ready for Apache to be run from the directory where it was installed, with the documents served from the subdirectory htdocs. There are lots of other options which should be set before you start really using Apache. However to get started quickly the files should work as installed.
NET START APACHE NET STOP APACHETo run Apache from a console window, select the "Apache Server" option from the Start menu. This will open a console window and start Apache running inside it. The window will remain active until you stop Apache. To stop Apache running, see Signalling Apache when Running.
After starting Apache running (either in a console window or as a service) if will be listening to port 80 (unless you changed the Port, Listen or BindAddress directives in the configuration files). To connect to the server and access the default page, launch a browser and enter this URL:
http://localhost/This should respond with a welcome page, and a link to the Apache manual. If nothing happens or you get an error, look in the error_log file in the logs directory.
Once your basic installation is working, you should configure it properly by editing the files in the conf directory.
The main differences in Apache for Windows are:
Because Apache for Windows is multithreaded, it does not use a separate process for each request, as Apache does with Unix. Instead there are usually only two Apache processes running: a parent process, and a child which handles the requests. Within the child each request is handled by a separate thread.
So the "process"-management directives are different:
MaxRequestsPerChild
- Like the Unix directive, this controls how many requests a
process will serve before exiting. However, unlike Unix, a
process serves all the requests at once, not just one, so if
this is set, it is recommended that a very high number is
used. The recommended default, MaxRequestsPerChild
0
, does not cause the process to ever exit.
ThreadsPerChild -
This directive is new, and tells the server how many threads it
should use. This is the maximum number of connections the server
can handle at once; be sure and set this number high enough for
your site if you get a lot of hits. The recommended default is
ThreadsPerChild 50
.
The directives that accept filenames as arguments now must use Windows filenames instead of Unix ones. However, because Apache uses Unix-style names internally, you must use forward slashes, not backslashes. Drive letters can be used; if omitted, the drive with the Apache executable will be assumed.
Apache for Windows contains the ability to load modules at runtime,
without recompiling the server. If Apache is compiled normally, it
will install a number of optional modules in the
\Apache\modules
directory. To activate these, or other
modules, the new LoadModule
directive must be used. For example, to active the status module,
use the following (in addition to the status-activating directives
in access.conf
):
LoadModule status_module modules/ApacheModuleStatus.dll
Information on creating loadable modules is also available.
Apache can also load ISAPI Extensions (i.e., Internet Server Applications), such as those used by Microsoft's IIS, and other Windows servers. More information is available.
When working with Apache it is important to know how it will find the configuration files. Apache will try one of the following, in this order.
The server root compiled into the server is usually "/apache". invoking apache with the -v switch will display this value labeled as HTTPD_ROOT.
Your current working directory when Apache is started up has no effect on Apache's behavior.
When invoked from the start menu or the Service Manager, Apache is usually passed no arguments, so using the registry entry is the preferred technique.
During a binary installation, a registry key will have been installed, for example:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Apache Group\Apache\1.3.4\ServerRoot
This key is compiled into the server and can enable you to test new versions without affecting the current version. Of course you must take care not to install the new version on top of the old version in the file system. You cannot run two invocations of Apache on Windows simultaneously.
If you did not do a binary install then Apache will in some scenarios complain that about the missing registry key. This warning can be ignored if it otherwise was able to find it's configuration files.
The value of this key is the "ServerRoot" directory, containing the conf directory. When Apache starts it will read the httpd.conf file from this directory. If this file contains a ServerRoot directive which is different from the directory obtained from the registry key above, Apache will forget the registry key and use the directory from the configuration file. If you copy the Apache directory or configuration files to a new location it is vital that you update the ServerRoot directory in the httpd.conf file to the new location.
To run Apache from the command line as a console application, use the following command:
apache -sApache will execute, and will remain running until it is stopped by pressing control-C. (The -s option is not required by Windows 95, but on Windows NT it prevents Apache waiting to see if Apache is running as a service.)
You can install Apache as a Windows NT service as follows:
apache -iand to remove the Apache service, use
apache -u
apache -k shutdown
Note: This option is only available with Apache 1.3.3 and later. For earlier versions, you need to use Control-C in the Apache console window to shut down the server.
This should be used instead of pressing Control-C in the running Apache console window, because it lets Apache end any current transactions and cleanup gracefully.
You can also tell Apache to restart. This makes it re-read the configuration files. Any transactions in progress are allowed to complete without interruption. To restart Apache, run
apache -k restart
Note: This option is only available with Apache 1.3.3 and later. For earlier versions, you need to use Control-C in the Apache console window to shut down the server.
Note for people familiar with the Unix version of Apache: these
commands provide a Windows equivalent to kill -TERM
pid
and kill -USR1 pid
. The command
line option used, -k
, was chosen as a reminder of the
"kill" command used on Unix.
Compiling Apache requires Microsoft Visual C++ 5.0 to be properly installed. It is easiest to compile with the command-line tools (nmake, etc...). Consult the VC++ manual to determine how to install them.
First, unpack the Apache distribution into an appropriate
directory. Open a command-line prompt, and change to the
src
subdirectory of the Apache distribution.
The master Apache makefile instructions are contained in the
Makefile.nt
file. To compile Apache on Windows NT, simply
use one of the following commands:
nmake /f Makefile.nt _apacher
(release build)
nmake /f Makefile.nt _apached
(debug build)
(1.3.4 and later) To compile Apache on Windows 95, use one of
nmake /f Makefile_win32.txt
(release build)
nmake /f Makefile_win32_debug.txt
(debug build)
These will both compile Apache. The latter will include debugging information in the resulting files, making it easier to find bugs and track down problems.
Apache can also be compiled using VC++'s Visual Studio development
environment. Although compiling Apache in this manner is not as
simple, it makes it possible to easily modify the Apache source, or
to compile Apache if the command-line tools are not installed.
Project files (.DSP
) are included for each of the
portions of Apache. To build Apache from the these projects files
you will need to build the following projects in this order:
os\win32\ApacheOS.dsp
regex\regex.dsp
ap\ap.dsp
main\gen_uri_delims.dsp
main\gen_test_char.dsp
ApacheCore.dsp
Apache.dsp
src\os\win32
subdirectory contains
project files for the optional modules (see below).
Once Apache has been compiled, it needs to be installed in its server
root directory. The default is the \Apache
directory, on the current hard drive.
To install the files into the \Apache
directory
automatically, use one the following nmake commands (see above):
nmake /f Makefile.nt installr INSTDIR=dir
(for release build)
nmake /f Makefile.nt installd INSTDIR=dir
(for debug build)
nmake /f Makefile_win32.txt install INSTDIR=dir
(for release build)
nmake /f Makefile_win32_debug.txt install INSTDIR=dir
(for debug build)
This will install the following:
dir\Apache.exe
- Apache executable
dir\ApacheCore.dll
- Main Apache shared library
dir\modules\ApacheModule*.dll
- Optional Apache
modules (7 files)
dir\conf
- Empty configuration directory
dir\logs
- Empty logging directory
If you do not have nmake, or wish to install in a different directory, be sure to use a similar naming scheme.
Before running the server you must fill out the conf directory. Copy the *.conf-dist-win from the distribution conf directory and rename *.conf. Edit the @@ServerRoot@@ entries to your actual server root (for example "C:\apache"). Copy over the conf/magic and conf/mime.types files as well.