User Guide
80 Getting Results with Novell Web Services
Getting Results with Novell Web Services
103-000133-001
August 29, 2001
Novell Confidential
Manual 99a38 July 17, 2001
Working with Configuration Styles
Configuration styles are an easy way to apply a set of options to specific files
or directories that your server maintains. For example, you can create a
configuration style that sets up access logging. When you apply that
configuration style to the files and directories that you want to log, you don’t
have to individually configure access logging for all the files and directories.
Creating a Configuration Style
1 Click Enterprise Web Server servername > Styles > New Style.
2 In the Style Name field, enter the name you want to give the configuration
style.
3 Click OK.
4 Select a configuration style to edit from the Style drop-down list and then
click Edit This Style.
5 From the list of links available, click the category you want to configure
for your style. You can configure the following information:
LCGI File Type: Lets you activate LCGI as a file type. For more
information about working with Web applications, see Chapter 9,
“Extending Your Server with Programs,” on page 97.
Character Set: Lets you change the character set for a resource. For
more information, see “Assigning a Character Set” on page 76.
Default Query Handler: Lets you set a default query handler for a
server resource.
Document Footer: Lets you add a document footer to a server
resource. For more information, see “Specifying a Document
Footer” on page 77.
Error Responses: Lets you customize the error responses that clients
see when they encounter an error from your server. For more
information, see “Customizing Error Responses” on page 57.
Log preferences: Lets you set preferences for access logs. For more
information, see “Working with Log Files” on page 113.
Restrict Access: Lets you restrict access to the entire server or parts
of it. For more information, see “Restricting Access” on page 58.
Server Parsed HTML: Lets you specify whether the server parses
files before they are sent to the client. For more information, see
“Customizing Parsed HTML” on page 78.