#
# Mod_perl incorporates a Perl interpreter into the Apache web server,
# so that the Apache web server can directly execute Perl code.
# Mod_perl links the Perl runtime library into the Apache web server
# and provides an object-oriented Perl interface for Apache's C
# language API. The end result is a quicker CGI script turnaround
# process, since no external Perl interpreter has to be started.
#
# Uncomment this line to globally enable warnings, which will be
# written to the server's error log. Warnings should be enabled
# during the development process, but should be disabled on a
# production server as they affect performance.
#
#PerlSwitches -w
# Uncomment this line to enable taint checking globally. When Perl is
# running in taint mode various checks are performed to reduce the
# risk of insecure data being passed to a subshell or being used to
# modify the filesystem. Unfortunately many Perl modules are not
# taint-safe, so you should exercise care before enabling it on a
# production server.
#
#PerlSwitches -T
# Preserve SCL environment
<IfModule mod_env.c>
PassEnv LD_LIBRARY_PATH
PassEnv MANPATH
PassEnv PATH
PassEnv X_SCLS
</IfModule>
# This will allow execution of mod_perl to compile your scripts to
# subroutines which it will execute directly, avoiding the costly
# compile process for most requests.
#
#Alias /perl @scl@/var/www/perl
#<Directory @scl@/var/www/perl>
# SetHandler perl-script
# PerlResponseHandler ModPerl::Registry
# PerlOptions +ParseHeaders
# Options +ExecCGI
#</Directory>
# This will allow remote server configuration reports, with the URL of
# http://servername/perl-status
# Change the ".example.com" to match your domain to enable.
#
#<Location /perl-status>
# SetHandler perl-script
# PerlResponseHandler Apache2::Status
# Order deny,allow
# Deny from all
# Allow from .example.com
#</Location>