Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4

| Description: | Provides a comprehensive overview of the server configuration | 
|---|---|
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module Identifier: | info_module | 
| Source File: | mod_info.c | 
To configure mod_info, add the following to your
    apache2.conf file.
<Location "/server-info">
    SetHandler server-info
</Location>
    You may wish to use mod_authz_host inside the
    <Location>
    directive to limit access to your server configuration
    information:
<Location "/server-info">
    SetHandler server-info
    Require host example.com
</Location>
    Once configured, the server information is obtained by
    accessing http://your.host.example.com/server-info

 Security Issues
 Security Issues Selecting the information shown
 Selecting the information shown Dumping the configuration on startup
 Dumping the configuration on startup Known Limitations
 Known LimitationsOnce mod_info is loaded into the server, its
    handler capability is available in all configuration
    files, including per-directory files (e.g.,
    .htaccess). This may have security-related
    ramifications for your site.
In particular, this module can leak sensitive information from the configuration directives of other Apache modules such as system paths, usernames/passwords, database names, etc. Therefore, this module should only be used in a controlled environment and always with caution.
You will probably want to use mod_authz_host
    to limit access to your server configuration information.
<Location "/server-info">
    SetHandler server-info
    # Allow access from server itself
    Require ip 127.0.0.1
    # Additionally, allow access from local workstation
    Require ip 192.168.1.17
</Location>
By default, the server information includes a list of all enabled modules, and for each module, a description of the directives understood by that module, the hooks implemented by that module, and the relevant directives from the current configuration.
Other views of the configuration information are available by
    appending a query to the server-info request. For
    example, http://your.host.example.com/server-info?config
    will show all configuration directives.
?<module-name>?config?hooks?list?server?providersIf the config define -DDUMP_CONFIG is set,
    mod_info will dump the pre-parsed configuration to
    stdout during server startup.
httpd -DDUMP_CONFIG -k start
Pre-parsed means that directives like
    <IfDefine> and
    <IfModule> are
    evaluated and environment variables are replaced. However it does
    not represent the final state of the configuration. In particular,
    it does not represent the merging or overriding that may happen
    for repeated directives.
This is roughly equivalent to the ?config query.
mod_info provides its information by reading the
    parsed configuration, rather than reading the original configuration
    file. There are a few limitations as a result of the way the parsed
    configuration tree is created:
ServerRoot,
          LoadModule, and
          LoadFile.Include,
          <IfModule> and
          <IfDefine> are not
          listed, but the included configuration directives are..htaccess files are
          not listed (since they do not form part of the permanent server
          configuration).<Directory>
          are listed normally, but mod_info cannot figure
          out the line number for the closing
          </Directory>.| Description: | Adds additional information to the module information displayed by the server-info handler | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | AddModuleInfo module-name string | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_info | 
This allows the content of string to be shown as HTML interpreted, Additional Information for the module module-name. Example:
AddModuleInfo mod_deflate.c 'See <a \
    href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/mod/mod_deflate.html">\
    http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/mod/mod_deflate.html</a>'