The freeware Apache web server runs on about half of the world's existing web sites, and it is rapidly increasing in popularity. Apache: The Definitive Guide, written and reviewed by key members of the Apache Group, is the only complete guide on the market today that describes how to obtain, set up, and secure the Apache software.
Apache was originally based on code and ideas found in the most popular HTTP server of the time: NCSA httpd 1.3 (early 1995). It has since evolved into a far superior system that can rival (and probably surpass) almost any other Unix-based HTTP server in terms of functionality, efficiency, and speed. The new version now includes support for Win32 systems. This new second edition of Apache: The Definitive Guide fully describes Windows support and all the other Apache 1.3 features. Contents include:
* The history of the Apache Group
* Obtaining and compiling the server
* Configuring and running Apache on Unix and Windows, including such topics as directory structures, virtual hosts, and CGI programming
* The Apache 1.3 Module API
* Apache security
* A complete list of configuration directives
* A complete demo of a sample web site
With Apache: The Definitive Guide, web administrators new to Apache can get up to speed more quickly than ever before by working through the tutorial demo. Experienced administrators and CGI programmers, and web administrators moving from Unix to Windows, will find the reference sections indispensable. Apache: The Definitive Guide is the definitive documentation for the world's most popular web server. Includes CD-ROM with Apache manuals and demo sites discussed in the book.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
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| Ben Laurie | Ben Laurie is the coauthor of Apache: The Definitive Guide , Technical Director of A.L. Digital Ltd. and The Bunker , a director of the Apache Software Foundation , author of Apache-SSL and a core team member of OpenSSL . As well as his obvious involvement with free software, he's also obsessed with security and privacy, particularly on the net. In his copious spare time, he writes stuff, sometimes code, sometimes words. |
| Bill Ball | Bill Ball is an author, technical writer, and magazine journalist who has been working with Linux since 1992. He has published more than a dozen articles and several successful computer books. |
| Peter Laurie | Peter Laurie, Ben's father, is a freelance journalist who has written several computer books. At one time, he was the editor of Practical Computing magazine. |