Good question. Adding that to my htaccess
Code:
Options +FollowSymLinks
RewriteEngine on
Read about it here:
http://corz.org/serv/tricks/htaccess2.php
and here too:
http://gallery.menalto.com/node/32607
pelle said:
Options +FollowSymlinks is used for hiding the real location of your files. For example, if you have a picture located in
/whatever/myfolder/secret/image.jpg
you can display it at the website as
img src="/images/image.jpg"
. You need Options +FollowSymlinks for this to work.
If you use mod_rewrite, you must have Options +FollowSymlinks enabled too.
And performancewise, Options +FollowSymlinks improves the performance a little, but it is really negligible.
Here is a nice explanation how FollowSymlinks works:
http://www.maxi-pedia.com/FollowSymLinks'
I also read this:
http://www.maxi-pedia.com/FollowSymLinks
What is FollowSymLinks?
We already mentioned that FollowSymLinks tells the web server to follow symbolic links while looking for a file, but what does it really mean?
Symbolic links (also called symlinks or softlinks) most resemble Windows shortcuts. Websites are often set up in a way that they show pictures and other content as being physically located at some other location than they really are. Let's say you browse to some website and look at the web page source. You might see something like
IMG SRC="/system/files/images/image.png" for the location of some picture that interests you. If you browse to this location in your Internet browser, it will show you the picture. But if you log into the server and go to that location
/system/files/images/, you will not find it. The
image.png file is not physically located in a
/system/files/images/ folder, but let's say it is in a folder called
/pictures.
How does the server know that it should pull
image.png from the
/pictures folder when you visit the website and browse to the
/system/files/images folder in your web browser? A so-called symbolic link is the guy that is responsible for this behavior. Somewhere in your system, there is a symlink that tells your server "
If a visitor requests /system/files/images/image.png then show him /pictures/image.png."
And what is the role of the FollowSymLinks setting in this?
FollowSymLinks relates to server security. When dealing with web servers, you can't just leave things undefined. You have to tell who has access to what. The FollowSymLinks setting tells your server whether it should or should not follow symlinks. In other words, if FollowSymLinks was disabled in our case, browsing to the
/system/files/images/image.png file would return depending on other settings either the 403 (access forbidden) or 404 (not found) error.