The Apache HTTP Server Project is an effort to develop and maintain an open-source HTTP server for modern operating systems including UNIX and Windows. The goal of this project is to provide a secure, efficient and extensible server that provides HTTP services in sync with the current HTTP standards. The Apache web server is easy to install. With one command, you can install it and all necessary dependencies: $ dnf install httpd All the configuration files for Apache are located in /etc/httpd/conf and /etc/httpd/conf.d.
- After changing this on httpd.conf, restart apache web server. So that it will reflect and clear your browser cache too. – Suriyan Suresh Oct 16 '13 at 5:38. I would like to report that this method didn't work for me with Ubuntu 12.4, however the proposed RewriteEngine answer did the trick.
- How to change the HTTP listening port in Apache. By Jack Wallen in Software on December 30, 2019, 5:00 AM PST If you find port 80 is a security risk on your network, you can change the Apache.
Apache OpenOffice® is the free and open productivity suite from the Apache Software Foundation.
Apache OpenOffice features six personal productivity applications: a word processor (and its web-authoring component),spreadsheet, presentation graphics, drawing, equation editor, and database. OpenOffice is released on Windows, Linux andmacOS, with more communities joining, including ports for FreeBSD and OS/2. OpenOffice is localized, supporting over 110languages worldwide.
OpenOffice.org was donated to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) on June 1, 2011. As with any code base brought tothe ASF, OpenOffice.org underwent incubation before graduating to a top-level project on 2012-10-17.
A lot of good information can be found on the Apache OpenOffice user portal, including a brief history ofOpenOffice.org.
Announcements¶
2021-02-07 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.9 is released!
2020-11-10 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.8 is released!
2019-09-21 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.7 is released!
2018-11-18 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.6 is released!
2017-12-30 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.5 is released!
2017-10-19 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.4 is released!
2016-10-12 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.3 is released!
2015-10-28 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.2 is released!
2014-08-21 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.1 is released!
2014-04-29 – Apache OpenOffice 4.1.0 is released!
2013-10-01 – Apache OpenOffice 4.0.1 is released!
2013-07-23 – Apache OpenOffice 4.0.0 is released!
2013-01-30 – Apache OpenOffice 3.4.1 now available in Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Korean, Polish, Basque, Asturian and Scottish Gaelic
2012-10-17 – Apache OpenOffice graduates from the Apache Incubator
2012-08-23 – Apache OpenOffice 3.4.1 (incubating) is released!
2012-05-08 – Apache OpenOffice 3.4.0 (incubating) is released!
Last updated: Tue 20 April 2021
The Hyper-Text Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is perhaps the most significant protocol used on the Internet today. Web services, network-enabled appliances and the growth of network computing continue to expand the role of the HTTP protocol beyond user-driven web browsers, while increasing the number of applications that require HTTP support.
Although the java.net package provides basic functionality for accessing resources via HTTP, it doesn’t provide the full flexibility or functionality needed by many applications. HttpClient seeks to fill this void by providing an efficient, up-to-date, and feature-rich package implementing the client side of the most recent HTTP standards and recommendations.
Designed for extension while providing robust support for the base HTTP protocol, HttpClient may be of interest to anyone building HTTP-aware client applications such as web browsers, web service clients, or systems that leverage or extend the HTTP protocol for distributed communication.
Documentation
- Quick Start - contains simple, complete examples of request execution with the classic, fluent and async APIs.
- Examples demonstrating some common as well as more complex use cases
Javadocs
API compatibility reports
Features
- Standards based, pure Java, implementation of HTTP versions 1.0, 1.1, 2.0
- Supports encryption with HTTPS (HTTP over SSL) protocol.
- Pluggable socket factories and TLS strategies.
- Transparent message exchanges through HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/1.0 proxies.
- Tunneled HTTPS connections through HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/1.0 proxies, via the CONNECT method.
- Basic, Digest, NTLMv1, NTLMv2, NTLM2 Session, SNPNEGO, Kerberos authentication schemes.
- HTTP state management and cookie support.
- Flexible connection management and pooling.
- Support for HTTP response caching.
- Source code is freely available under the Apache License.
Standards Compliance
Apache Http Server Latest Version
HttpClient strives to conform to the following specifications endorsed by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and the internet at large:
Apache Https Configuration
- RFC 7230 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing
- RFC 7231 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content
- RFC 7235 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Authentication
- RFC 1945 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol – HTTP/1.0
- RFC 2817 - Upgrading to TLS Within HTTP/1.1
- RFC 2818 - HTTP Over TLS
- RFC 6265 - HTTP State Management Mechanism (Cookies)
- RFC 2396 - Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax