<Location>
DirectiveThe <Location> directive provides for access control by
URL. It is comparable to the <Directory> directive, and
should be matched with a </Location> directive. Directives that
apply to the URL given should be listen
within. <Location>
sections are processed in the
order they appear in the configuration file, after the
<Directory> sections and .htaccess
files are
read.
Note that, due to the way HTTP functions, URL prefix
should, save for proxy requests, be of the form /path/
,
and should not include the http://servername
. It doesn't
necessarily have to protect a directory (it can be an individual
file, or a number of files), and can include wild-cards. In a wild-card
string, `?' matches any single character, and `*' matches any
sequences of characters.
This functionality is especially useful when combined with the
SetHandler
directive. For example, to enable status requests, but allow them only
from browsers at foo.com, you might use:
<Location /status>
SetHandler server-status
order deny,allow
deny from all
allow from .foo.com
</Location>