# On some PHP servers it may help if this file is copied # to the main moodle directory and renamed .htaccess # # As soon as you do this, check your web site. Is it # still working OK? If you are getting a "configuration # error" then you may need to enable overrides by editing # the main httpd.conf for Apache and in the main server # or virtual server area, adding something like: # # # AllowOverride All # # ### Firstly, if you are using Apache 2, you need the following ### three lines to allow Apache to pass a PATH_INFO variable ### correctly for URLs like http://server/file.php/arg1/arg2 AcceptPathInfo on ### Secondly, you can define the default files in the Moodle ### directories as follows: DirectoryIndex index.php index.html index.htm ### Thirdly, set up some PHP variables that Moodle needs php_flag file_uploads 1 php_flag short_open_tag 1 php_flag session.auto_start 0 php_flag session.bug_compat_warn 0 ### Fourthly, sometimes Apache limits the size of uploaded files ### (this is a separate limit to the one in PHP, see below). ### The setting here turns off this limitation LimitRequestBody 0 ### These are optional - you may not want to override php.ini ### To enable them, remove the leading hash (#) #php_value upload_max_filesize 2M #php_value post_max_size 2M #php_value session.gc_maxlifetime 7200 ### You can change the following line to point to the ### error/index.php file in your Moodle distribution. ### It provides a form which emails you (the admin) ### about 404 errors (URL not found). #ErrorDocument 404 http://example.org/moodle/error/index.php ### People have reported that these can help in some cases ### (unusual) when you see errors about undefined functions #php_value auto_prepend_file none #php_value include_path .