Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4

| Description: | Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) functionality | 
|---|---|
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module Identifier: | dav_module | 
| Source File: | mod_dav.c | 
This module provides class 1 and class 2 WebDAV ('Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning') functionality for Apache. This extension to the HTTP protocol allows creating, moving, copying, and deleting resources and collections on a remote web server.
To enable mod_dav, add the following to a
    container in your apache2.conf file:
Dav On
This enables the DAV file system provider, which is implemented
    by the mod_dav_fs module. Therefore, that module
    must be compiled into the server or loaded at runtime using the
    LoadModule directive.
In addition, a location for the DAV lock database must be
    specified in the global section of your apache2.conf
    file using the DavLockDB
    directive:
DavLockDB /usr/local/apache2/var/DavLock
The directory containing the lock database file must be
    writable by the User
    and Group under which
    Apache is running.
You may wish to add a <Limit> clause inside the <Location> directive to limit access to
    DAV-enabled locations. If you want to set the maximum amount of
    bytes that a DAV client can send at one request, you have to use
    the LimitXMLRequestBody
    directive. The "normal" LimitRequestBody directive has no effect on DAV
    requests.
DavLockDB /usr/local/apache2/var/DavLock
<Directory /usr/local/apache2/htdocs/foo>
    Require all granted
    Dav On
    AuthType Basic
    AuthName DAV
    AuthUserFile user.passwd
    <LimitExcept GET POST OPTIONS>
        Require user admin
    </LimitExcept>
</Directory>
Since DAV access methods allow remote clients to manipulate
    files on the server, you must take particular care to assure that
    your server is secure before enabling mod_dav.
Any location on the server where DAV is enabled should be
    protected by authentication.  The use of HTTP Basic Authentication
    is not recommended. You should use at least HTTP Digest
    Authentication, which is provided by the
    mod_auth_digest module. Nearly all WebDAV clients
    support this authentication method. An alternative is Basic
    Authentication over an SSL enabled
    connection.
In order for mod_dav to manage files, it must
    be able to write to the directories and files under its control
    using the User and
    Group under which
    Apache is running.  New files created will also be owned by this
    User and Group.  For this reason, it is
    important to control access to this account.  The DAV repository
    is considered private to Apache; modifying files outside of Apache
    (for example using FTP or filesystem-level tools) should not be
    allowed.
mod_dav may be subject to various kinds of
    denial-of-service attacks.  The LimitXMLRequestBody directive can be
    used to limit the amount of memory consumed in parsing large DAV
    requests.  The DavDepthInfinity directive can be
    used to prevent PROPFIND requests on a very large
    repository from consuming large amounts of memory.  Another
    possible denial-of-service attack involves a client simply filling
    up all available disk space with many large files.  There is no
    direct way to prevent this in Apache, so you should avoid giving
    DAV access to untrusted users.
One common request is to use mod_dav to
    manipulate dynamic files (PHP scripts, CGI scripts, etc).  This is
    difficult because a GET request will always run the
    script, rather than downloading its contents.  One way to avoid
    this is to map two different URLs to the content, one of which
    will run the script, and one of which will allow it to be
    downloaded and manipulated with DAV.
Alias /phparea /home/gstein/php_files
Alias /php-source /home/gstein/php_files
<Location /php-source>
    Dav On
    ForceType text/plain
</Location>
    With this setup, http://example.com/phparea can be
    used to access the output of the PHP scripts, and
    http://example.com/php-source can be used with a DAV
    client to manipulate them.
| Description: | Enable WebDAV HTTP methods | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | Dav On|Off|provider-name | 
| Default: | Dav Off | 
| Context: | directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_dav | 
Use the Dav directive to enable the
    WebDAV HTTP methods for the given container:
<Location /foo>
    Dav On
</Location>
    The value On is actually an alias for the default
    provider filesystem which is served by the mod_dav_fs module. Note, that once you have DAV enabled
    for some location, it cannot be disabled for sublocations.
    For a complete configuration example have a look at the section above.
| Description: | Allow PROPFIND, Depth: Infinity requests | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | DavDepthInfinity on|off | 
| Default: | DavDepthInfinity off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_dav | 
Use the DavDepthInfinity directive to
    allow the processing of PROPFIND requests containing the
    header 'Depth: Infinity'. Because this type of request could constitute
    a denial-of-service attack, by default it is not allowed.
| Description: | Minimum amount of time the server holds a lock on a DAV resource | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | DavMinTimeout seconds | 
| Default: | DavMinTimeout 0 | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_dav | 
When a client requests a DAV resource lock, it can also specify a time when the lock will be automatically removed by the server. This value is only a request, and the server can ignore it or inform the client of an arbitrary value.
Use the DavMinTimeout directive to specify, in
    seconds, the minimum lock timeout to return to a client.
    Microsoft Web Folders defaults to a timeout of 120 seconds; the
    DavMinTimeout can override this to a higher value
    (like 600 seconds) to reduce the chance of the client losing
    the lock due to network latency.
<Location /MSWord>
    DavMinTimeout 600
</Location>