NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | EXAMPLES | EXIT STATUS | SEE ALSO
Use this command to enable the parsed HTML content. HTML content is normally sent to the client exactly as it exists on disk without any server intervention. However, the server can search HTML files for special commands (that is, it can parse the HTML) before sending the documents. If you want the server to parse these files and insert request-specific information or files into documents, you must first enable HTML parsing.
For connect_options description, see help(1).
Specify this option to print this command on the standard output before executing. Also, prints the default value for all the non-mandatory options that you have not provided in the command.
If you specify this option, wadm will not prompt you for passwords while executing this command. Use this option if you have defined all passwords in a password file and specified the file using the --password-file connect_option.
Specify this option to display a verbose output.
Specify the files the server will parse.
shtml - If you specify this type, the server will parse only files with the extension .shtml. This is the most common (and default) choice.
exec-html - If you specify this type, the server will parse files with the execute bit and the extension .shtml (UNIX and Linux only). Using the execute permissions can be unreliable because in some cases the bit is set on files that are not executable.
html - If you specify this type, the server will parse all HTML files. Choosing this option can slow server performance.
If you specify this option, the server parses HTML but does not allow HTML files to execute arbitrary programs on the server.
Specify the name of the virtual server.
Specify the name of the configuration.
wadm enable-parsed-html --user=admin --password-file=admin.pwd --host=serverhost --port=8989 --config=config1 --vs=config1_vs1 |
The following exit values are returned:
command executed successfully
error in executing the command
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | EXAMPLES | EXIT STATUS | SEE ALSO