Virtual Host General
Table of Contents
Document Root | Administrator Email | Enable GZIP Compression | Enable Brotli Compression | Enable GeoLocation Lookup | cgroups
Use Server's Log | File Name | Log Level | Rolling Size (bytes) | Keep Days | Compress Archive
Log Control | File Name | Piped Logger | Log Format | Log Headers | Rolling Size (bytes) | Keep Days | Compress Archive | Bytes Log
Use Server Index Files | Index Files | Auto Index | Auto Index URI
Temporary File Path | Temporary File Permissions | Pass Upload Data by File Path
Document Root⇑
Description
Specifies the document root for this virtual host. $VH_ROOT/html is recommended. This directory is referred to as $DOC_ROOT in contexts.
Syntax
A path which can be absolute, relative to $SERVER_ROOT, or relative to $VH_ROOT.
Administrator Email⇑
Description
Specifies email address(es) of the administrator(s) of this virtual host.
Syntax
Comma separated list of email addresses
Enable GZIP Compression⇑
Description
Specifies whether to enable GZIP compression for this virtual host. This setting is only effective when Enable GZIP Compression is set to Yes at the server level.
Syntax
Select from radio box
See Also
Enable Brotli Compression⇑
Description
Specifies whether to enable Brotli compression for this virtual host. This setting is only effective when Brotli Compression Level (Static File) is set to a non-zero value at the server level.
Syntax
Select from radio box
See Also
Enable GeoLocation Lookup⇑
Description
Specifies whether to enable/disable IP Geolocation lookup. Can be set at server, virtual host, or context level. IP Geolocation is disabled by default when using value "Not Set".
Syntax
Select from radio box
See Also
cgroups⇑
Description
A Linux kernel feature that limits, accounts for, and isolates the resource usage (CPU, memory, disk I/O, network, etc.) of a collection of processes. You must be running cgroups v2 which is determined by the existence of the file /sys/fs/cgroup/cgroup.controllers.
Setting this to Disabled at the Server level will disable this setting server-wide. In all other cases, the Server level setting can be overridden at the Virtual Host level.
Default values:
Server level: Off
VH level: Inherit Server level setting
Syntax
Select from drop down list
Use Server's Log⇑
Description
Specifies whether to put log messages from this virtual host into the server log file instead of creating its own log file.
Syntax
Select from radio box
File Name⇑
Description
Specifies the path for the log file.
Syntax
Filename which can be an absolute path or a relative path to $SERVER_ROOT, $VH_ROOT.
Tips
Place the log file on a separate disk.
Log Level⇑
Description
Specifies the level of logging. Available levels (from high to low) are ERROR, WARNING, NOTICE, INFO, and DEBUG. Only messages with a level higher than or equal to the current setting will be logged. If you want to set it to DEBUG, you must set the server log level to DEBUG as well. The level of debugging is controlled solely at the server level by Debug Level.
Syntax
Select from drop down list
Tips
Unless Debug Level is set to a level other than NONE, DEBUG log level does not have any performance impact and is recommended.
See Also
Rolling Size (bytes)⇑
Description
Specifies when the current log file needs to be rolled over, also known as log rotation. When the file size is over the rollover limit, the active log file will be renamed to log_name.mm_dd_yyyy(.sequence) in the same directory and a new active log file will be created. The actual size of the rotated log file once it is created will sometimes be a little bigger than this size limit. Set to 0 to disable log rotation.
Syntax
Integer number
Tips
Append "K", "M", "G" to the number for kilo-, mega- and giga- bytes.
Keep Days⇑
Description
Specifies how many days the access log file will be kept on disk. Only rotated log files older than the specified number of days will be deleted. The current log file will not be touched regardless how many days worth of data it contains. If you do not want to auto-delete stale and very old log files, set this to 0.
Syntax
Integer number
Compress Archive⇑
Description
Specifies whether to compress rotated log files in order to save disk space.
Syntax
Select from radio box
Tips
Log files are highly compressible and this is recommended to reduce disk usage for old logs.
Log Control⇑
Description
Where the access log should be written. There are three options:
- Write to the server's access log
- Create an access log for this virtual host
- Disable access logging
Syntax
Select from drop down list
File Name⇑
Description
The access log filename.
Syntax
Filename which can be an absolute path or a relative path to $SERVER_ROOT, $VH_ROOT.
Tips
Put access log file on a separate disk.
Piped Logger⇑
Description
Specifies the external application that will receive the access log data sent by LiteSpeed through a pipe on its STDIN stream (file handle is 0). When this field is specified, the access log will be sent only to the logger application and not the access log file specified in previous entry.
The logger application must be defined in External Apps section first. Server-level access logging can only use an external logger application defined at the server level. Virtual host-level access logging can only use a logger application defined at the virtual host level.
The logger process is spawned in the same way as other external (CGI/FastCGI/LSAPI) processes. This means it will execute as the user ID specified in the virtual host's External App Set UID Mode settings and will never run on behalf of a privileged user.
LiteSpeed web server performs simple load balancing among multiple logger applications if more than one instance of a logger application is configured. LiteSpeed server always attempts to keep the number of logger applications as low as possible. Only when one logger application fails to process access log entries in time will the server attempt to spawn another instance of the logger application.
If a logger crashes, the web server will start another instance but the log data in the stream buffer will be lost. It is possible to lose log data if external loggers cannot keep up with the speed and volume of the log stream.
Syntax
Select from drop down list
Log Format⇑
Description
Specifies the log format for the access log. When log format is set, it will override the Log Headers setting.
Syntax
String. The syntax of log format is compatible with Apache 2.0's custom log format.
Example
"%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b"
Common Log Format with Virtual Host
"%v %h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b"
NCSA extended/combined log format
"%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-agent}i\"
Log cookie value of Foobar
"%{Foobar}C"
See Also
Log Headers⇑
Description
Specifies whether to log HTTP request headers: Referer, UserAgent, and Host.
Syntax
Select from checkbox
Tips
Turn this off if you do not need these headers in the access log.
See Also
Bytes Log⇑
Description
Specifies the path to the bandwidth bytes log file. When specified, a cPanel compatible bandwidth log will be created. This will log the total bytes transferred for a request including both the request and reply bodies.
Syntax
Filename which can be an absolute path or a relative path to $SERVER_ROOT.
Tips
Put the log file on a separate disk.
Use Server Index Files⇑
Description
Specifies whether to use the server's index file settings. If set to Yes, only the server's settings will be used. If set to No, the server's settings will not be used. If set to Addition, additional index files can be added to server's index file list for this virtual host. If you want to disable index files for this virtual host, you can set the value to No and leave the index files field empty.
Syntax
Select from drop down list
Index Files⇑
Description
Specifies names of index files that will be searched sequentially when a URL is mapped to a directory. You can customize it at the server, virtual host, and context level.
Syntax
Comma-delimited list of index filenames.
Tips
Only set index files that you need.
Auto Index⇑
Description
Specifies whether to generate a directory index on the fly when index files listed in Index Files are not available in a directory. This option is customizable at the virtual host and context level, and is inherited along the directory tree until it is explicitly overridden. You can customize the generated index page. Please check online wiki How-tos.
Syntax
Select from radio box
Tips
It is recommended to turn off Auto Index wherever possible to prevent revealing confidential data.
See Also
Auto Index URI⇑
Description
Specifies the URI that will be used to generate the index page when index files listed in Index Files are not available in a directory. LiteSpeed web server uses an external script to generate the index page providing the maximum customization flexibility. The default script produces an index page with same look as Apache's. To customize the generated index page, please read online wiki How-tos. The directory to be indexed is passed to the script via an environment variable "LS_AI_PATH".
Syntax
URI
See Also
Customized Error Pages⇑
Description
Whenever the server has a problem processing a request, the server will return an error code and an html page as an error message to the web client. Error codes are defined in the HTTP protocol (see RFC 2616). LiteSpeed web server has a built-in default error page for each error code, but a customized page can be configured for each error code as well. These error pages can be even further customized to be unique for each virtual host.
Error Code⇑
Description
Specifies the HTTP status code for the error page. Only the selected HTTP status code will have this customized error page.
Syntax
Select from drop down list
URL⇑
Description
Specifies the URL of the customized error page. The server will forward the request to this URL when the corresponding HTTP status code has returned. If this URL refers to a non-existing resource, the built-in error page will be used. The URL can be a static file, a dynamically generated page, or a page on another web site (a URL starting with "http(s)://"). When referring to a page on another web site, the client will receive a redirect status code instead of the original status code.
Syntax
URL
Enable Expires⇑
Description
Specifies whether to generate an Expires header for static files. If enabled, an Expires header will be generated based on Expires Default and Expires By Type.
This can be set at server, virtual host and context level. Lower level settings will override higher level ones, i.e. context settings will override virtual host settings and virtual host settings will override server settings.
Syntax
Select from radio box
Expires Default⇑
Description
Specifies default settings for Expires header generation. This setting takes effect when Enable Expires is set to "Yes". It can be overridden by Expires By Type. Do not set this default at the server or virtual host level unless you have to, since it will generate Expires headers for all pages. Most of time this should be set at the context level for certain directories that do not change often. If there is no default setting, no Expires header will be generated for types not specified in Expires By Type.
Syntax
A|Mseconds
The file will expire after base time(A|M) plus specified seconds. Base time "A" sets the value to the client's access time and "M" to the file's last modified time.
Expires By Type⇑
Description
Specifies Expires header settings for individual MIME types.
Syntax
Comma delimited list of "MIME-type=A|Mseconds". The file will expire after base time (A|M) plus specified seconds.
Base time "A" sets the value to the client's access time and "M" to the file's last modified time. MIME-type accepts wildcard "*", like image/*.
File Upload⇑
Description
Provides additional security functionality when uploading files by using a Request Body Parser to parse files to a server local directory where they can be easily scanned for malicious intent by third party modules. Request Body Parser is used when Pass Upload Data by File Path is enabled or a module calls LSIAPI’s set_parse_req_body in the LSI_HKPT_HTTP_BEGIN level. API examples provided in source package.
See Also
Temporary File Path⇑
Description
Temporary directory where files being uploaded to server will be stored while request body parser is working. Default value is /tmp/lshttpd/.
Syntax
Absolute path or path starting with $SERVER_ROOT (for Server and VHost levels) or $VH_ROOT (for VHost levels).
Temporary File Permissions⇑
Description
Determines file permissions used for files stored in temporary directory. Server level setting is global, can be overridden at VHost level.
Syntax
3 digits octet number. Default value is 666.
Pass Upload Data by File Path⇑
Description
Specify whether or not to pass upload file data by path. If enabled, file path along with some other information is sent to backend handler instead of file itself when uploading. This saves on CPU resources and file transfer time but requires some updates to backend to implement. If disabled, file content will be transferred to backend handler, request body is still parsed to files.
Syntax
Select from radio box
Tips
Enable this to speed up file upload processing if backward compatibility is not an issue.
Suffix⇑
Description
Specifies the script file suffixes that will be handled by this script handler. Suffixes must be unique.
Syntax
Comma delimited list with period "." character prohibited.
Tips
The server will automatically add a special MIME type ("application/x-httpd-[suffix]") for the first suffix in the list. For example, MIME type "application/x-httpd-php53" will be added for suffix "php53". Suffixes after the first need to set up in the MIME Settings settings.
Though we list suffixes in this field, the script handlers use MIME types, not suffixes, to decide which scripts to handle.
Only specify the suffixes you really need.
Handler Type⇑
Description
Specifies the type of external application that processes these script files. Available types are: CGI, FastCGI, Web Server, LSAPI app, Load balancer, or Servlet Engine. For FastCGI, Web Server and Servlet Engine, a Handler Name needs to be specified. This is an external application name as predefined in the External Apps section.
Syntax
Select from drop down list
Handler Name⇑
Description
Specifies the name of the external application that processes the script files when the handler type is FastCGI, Web Server, LSAPI, Load Balancer, or Servlet Engine.
Syntax
Select from drop down list
php.ini Override⇑
Description
Used to overwrite php.ini settings in the current context (Virtual Host level or Context level).
Supported directives are:
php_value
php_flag
php_admin_value
php_admin_flag
All other lines/directives will be ignored.
Syntax
Override syntax is similar to Apache, a newline separated list of directives and their values with each directive being prepended by php_value, php_flag, php_admin_value, or php_admin_flag appropriately.
Example
php_admin_flag engine on
php_admin_value open_basedir "/home"