The directive JkOptions allow you to set many forwarding options which will enable (+)
                        or disable (-) following option. Without any leading signs, options will be enabled.
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        The four following options +ForwardURIxxx are mutually exclusive.
                        Exactly one of them is required, a negative sign prefix is not allowed with them.
                        The default value is "ForwardURIProxy" since version 1.2.24.
                        It was "ForwardURICompatUnparsed" in version 1.2.23 and
                        "ForwardURICompat" until version 1.2.22.
                        You can turn the default off by switching on one of the other two options.
                        You should leave this at it's default value, unless you have a very good
                        reason to change it.
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        All options are inherited from the global server to virtual hosts.
                        Options that support enabling (plus options) and disabling (minus options),
                        are inherited in the following way:
                        
                        
                        options(vhost) = plus_options(global) - minus_options(global) + plus_options(vhost) - minus_options(vhost)
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        Using JkOptions ForwardURIProxy, the forwarded URI
                        will be partially reencoded after processing inside Apache httpd and
                        before forwarding to Tomcat. This will be compatible with local
                        URL manipulation by mod_rewrite and with URL encoded session ids.
                        
                        
                          JkOptions     +ForwardURIProxy
                        
                         
                        
                        
                        
                        Using JkOptions ForwardURICompatUnparsed, the forwarded URI
                        will be unparsed. It's spec compliant and secure.
                        It will always forward the original request URI, so rewriting
                        URIs with mod_rewrite and then forwarding the rewritten URI
                        will not work.
                        
                        
                          JkOptions     +ForwardURICompatUnparsed
                        
                         
                        
                        
                        
                        Using JkOptions ForwardURICompat, the forwarded URI will
                        be decoded by Apache httpd. Encoded characters will be decoded and
                        explicit path components like ".." will already be resolved.
                        This is less spec compliant and is not safe if you are using
                        prefix JkMount. This option will allow to rewrite URIs with
                        mod_rewrite before forwarding.
                        
                        
                          JkOptions     +ForwardURICompat
                        
                         
                        
                        
                        
                        Using JkOptions ForwardURIEscaped, the forwarded URI will
                        be the encoded form of the URI used by ForwardURICompat.
                        Explicit path components like ".." will already be resolved.
                        This will not work in combination with URL encoded session IDs,
                        but it will allow to rewrite URIs with mod_rewrite before forwarding.
                        
                        
                          JkOptions     +ForwardURIEscaped
                        
                         
                        
                        
                        
                        JkOptions RejectUnsafeURI will block all
                        URLs, which contain percent signs '%' or backslashes '"'
                        after decoding.
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        Most web apps do not use such URLs. Using the option RejectUnsafeURI, you
                        can block several well known URL encoding attacks. By default, this option
                        is not set.
                        
                        
                        You can also realize such a check with mod_rewrite, which is more powerful
                        but also slightly more complicated.
                        
                        
                          JkOptions     +RejectUnsafeURI
                        
                         
                        
                        
                        
                        JkOptions ForwardDirectories is used in conjunction with DirectoryIndex
                        directive of Apache web server. As such mod_dir should be available to Apache,
                        statically or dynamically (DSO)
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        When DirectoryIndex is configured, Apache will create sub-requests for
                        each of the local-url's specified in the directive, to determine if there is a
                        local file that matches (this is done by stat-ing the file).
                        
                        
                        If ForwardDirectories is set to false (default) and Apache doesn't find any
                        files that match, Apache will serve the content of the directory (if directive
                        Options specifies Indexes for that directory) or a 403 Forbidden response (if
                        directive Options doesn't specify Indexes for that directory).
                        
                        
                        If ForwarDirectories is set to true and Apache doesn't find any files that
                        match, the request will be forwarded to Tomcat for resolution. This is used in
                        cases when Apache cannot see the index files on the file system for various
                        reasons: Tomcat is running on a different machine, the JSP file has been
                        precompiled etc.
                        
                        Note that locally visible files will take precedence over the
                        ones visible only to Tomcat (i.e. if Apache can see the file, that's the one
                        that's going to get served). This is important if there is more then one type of
                        file that Tomcat normally serves - for instance Velocity pages and JSP pages.
                        
                        
                          JkOptions     +ForwardDirectories
                        
                         
                        
                        
                        
                        JkOptions ForwardLocalAddress, you ask mod_jk to send the local address,
                        of the Apache web server instead remote client address. This can be used by
                        Tomcat remote address valve for allowing connections only from registered Apache
                        web servers.
                        
                        
                          JkOptions     +ForwardLocalAddress
                        
                         
                        
                        
                        
                        JkOptions FlushPackets, you ask mod_jk to flush Apache's connection
                        buffer after each AJP packet chunk received from Tomcat. This option can have
                        a strong performance penalty for Apache and Tomcat as writes are performed
                        more often than would normally be required (ie: at the end of each
                        response).
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        JkOptions FlushHeader, you ask mod_jk to flush Apache's connection
                        buffer after the response headers have been  received from Tomcat.
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        JkOptions DisableReuse, you ask mod_jk to close connections immediately
                        after their use. Normally mod_jk uses persistent connections and pools idle
                        connections to reuse them, when new requests have to be sent to Tomcat.
                        
                        
                        Using this option will have a strong performance penalty for Apache and Tomcat.
                        Use this only as a last resort in case of unfixable network problems.
                        If a firewall between Apache and Tomcat silently kills idle connections,
                        try to use the worker attribute socket_keepalive in combination with an appropriate
                        TCP keepalive value in your OS.
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        
                        JkOptions ForwardKeySize, you ask mod_jk, when using ajp13, to forward also the SSL Key Size as
                        required by Servlet API 2.3.
                        This flag shouldn't be set when servlet engine is Tomcat 3.2.x (off by default).
                        
                        
                          JkOptions     +ForwardKeySize
                        
                         
                        
                        
                        
                        JkOptions ForwardSSLCertChain,  you ask mod_jk, when using ajp13,
                        to forward SSL certificate chain (off by default).
                        Mod_jk only passes the SSL_CLIENT_CERT to the AJP connector. This is not a
                        problem with self-signed certificates or certificates directly signed by the
                        root CA certificate. However, there's a large number of certificates signed by
                        an intermediate CA certificate, where this is a significant problem: A servlet
                        will not have the possibility to validate the client certificate on its own. The
                        bug would be fixed by passing on the SSL_CLIENT_CERT_CHAIN to Tomcat via the AJP connector.
                        
                        This directive exists only since version 1.2.22.
                        
                        
                          JkOptions     +ForwardSSLCertChain
                        
                         
                        
                        
                        
                        The directive JkEnvVar allows you to forward environment variables from Apache server to Tomcat engine.
                        The variables can be retrieved on the Tomcat side as request attributes.
                        You can add a default value as a second parameter to the directive.
                        If the default value is not given explicitely, the variable
                        will only be send, if it is set during runtime.
                        
                        
                        The variables are inherited from the global server to virtual hosts.
                        
                        
                          JkEnvVar     SSL_CLIENT_V_START     undefined