Mod redirect » History » Revision 32
« Previous |
Revision 32/36
(diff)
| Next »
gstrauss, 2021-07-17 23:32
URL Redirection¶
- Table of contents
- URL Redirection
Module: mod_redirect
Description¶
The redirect module is used to specify redirects for a set of URLs.
Options¶
option | description | note |
---|---|---|
url.redirect | URL path matching rules to generate HTTP Location redirect | |
url.redirect-code | defines the http code that is sent with the redirect URL (default: 301) | (since 1.4.31) |
url.redirect-code¶
HTTP status code sent with the HTTP redirect (default: 301)
e.g. url.redirect-code = 302
url.redirect¶
URL path matching rules to generate HTTP Location redirect
url.redirect = ( "^/show/([0-9]+)/([0-9]+)$" => "http://www.example.org/show.php?isdn=$1&page$2", "^/get/([0-9]+)/([0-9]+)$" => "http://www.example.org/get.php?isdn=$1&page$2" ) # make an external redirect from any www.host (with www.) to the host (without www.) $HTTP["host"] =~ "^www\.(.*)$" { url.redirect = ("" => "https://%1${url.path}${qsa}") }
(more detailed documentation can be found in the Regular Expression section of mod_rewrite doc)
Note that the "%1" in the url.redirect
target refers to the parenthesized subexpression in the conditional regexp (.*) directly enclosing the url.redirect
. It does not have the meaning that "%1" would have in evhost.path-pattern (where it would mean 'top-level domain'). If url.redirect
is specified within a regex conditional (=~
), % patterns are replaced by the corresponding groups from the condition regex. %1 is replaced with the first subexpression, %2 with the second, etc. %0 is replaced by the entire substring matching the regexp. See above and below for examples using % patterns. A negative match (!~
) does not save any % patterns.
Redirect rules are evaluated up until the first matched redirect rule. As a special case to allow short-circuiting the redirect rules without triggering a redirect, specify a blank target: url.redirect = ( "^/do-not-redirect/this/path" => "" )
. Then, a further catch-all redirect rule might redirect everything else. This can be used as an alternative to nested conditions inside other conditions. The blank target special-case is available in version 1.4.40 or later.
Examples¶
HowToRedirectHttpToHttps - Redirecting any HTTP request to HTTPS aka forcing SSL
(more detailed documentation can be found in the Regular Expression section of mod_rewrite doc)
Some people love the www part in the url. A general solution to move all non "www." hosts to the "www." equivalent:
$HTTP["host"] !~ "^www\." { url.redirect = ("" => "https://www.${url.authority}${url.path}${qsa}") }
Redirect all *.example.org subdomains except a few to www.example.org:
$HTTP["host"] !~ "^(?:www|mail|mysql)\.example\.org$" { url.redirect = ("" => "https://www.example.org${url.path}${qsa}") }
Redirect example.xxx, www.example.net, www.example.org to www.example.com
$HTTP["host"] =~ "^(?:example\.(?:com|net|org)|(?:www\.)?example\.(?:net|org))$" { url.redirect = ( "" => "http://www.example.com${url.path}${qsa}" ) }
In the other direction, redirect www.example.com to example.com
$HTTP["host"] == "www.example.com" { url.redirect = ( "" => "http://example.com${url.path}${qsa}" ) }
Redirect all domains starting "www." to domains without "www." prefix
$HTTP["host"] =~ "^www\.(.*)$" { url.redirect = ( "" => "http://%1${url.path}${qsa}" ) }
Similar configurations can be used to redirect all .net/.org etc. requests to the dot-com address for the site:
$HTTP["host"] =~ "^(?:www\.)?example\.(?:net|org)$" { url.redirect = ( "" => "http://example.com${url.path}${qsa}" ) }
Updated by gstrauss over 3 years ago · 32 revisions