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1800 lines
83 KiB
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
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<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
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<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en"><head><!--
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This file is generated from xml source: DO NOT EDIT
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-->
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<title>mod_rewrite - Apache HTTP Server</title>
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<link href="../style/css/manual.css" rel="stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="Main stylesheet" />
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<link href="../style/css/manual-loose-100pc.css" rel="alternate stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="No Sidebar - Default font size" />
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<link href="../style/css/manual-print.css" rel="stylesheet" media="print" type="text/css" />
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<link href="../images/favicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" /></head>
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<body>
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<div id="page-header">
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<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p>
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<p class="apache">Apache HTTP Server Version 2.1</p>
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<img alt="" src="../images/feather.gif" /></div>
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<div class="up"><a href="./"><img title="<-" alt="<-" src="../images/left.gif" /></a></div>
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<div id="path">
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<a href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> > <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/">HTTP Server</a> > <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs-project/">Documentation</a> > <a href="../">Version 2.1</a> > <a href="./">Modules</a></div>
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<div id="page-content">
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<div id="preamble"><h1>Apache Module mod_rewrite</h1>
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<div class="toplang">
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<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/mod/mod_rewrite.html" title="English"> en </a></p>
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</div>
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<table class="module"><tr><th><a href="module-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Provides a rule-based rewriting engine to rewrite requested
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URLs on the fly</td></tr>
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<tr><th><a href="module-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
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<tr><th><a href="module-dict.html#ModuleIdentifier">Module<EFBFBD>Identifier:</a></th><td>rewrite_module</td></tr>
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<tr><th><a href="module-dict.html#SourceFile">Source<EFBFBD>File:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite.c</td></tr>
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<tr><th><a href="module-dict.html#Compatibility">Compatibility:</a></th><td>Available in Apache 1.3 and later</td></tr></table>
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<h3>Summary</h3>
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<blockquote>
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<p>``The great thing about mod_rewrite is it gives you
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all the configurability and flexibility of Sendmail.
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The downside to mod_rewrite is that it gives you all
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the configurability and flexibility of Sendmail.''</p>
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<p class="cite">-- <cite>Brian Behlendorf</cite><br />
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Apache Group</p>
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</blockquote>
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<blockquote>
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<p>`` Despite the tons of examples and docs,
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mod_rewrite is voodoo. Damned cool voodoo, but still
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voodoo. ''</p>
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<p class="cite">-- <cite>Brian Moore</cite><br />
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bem@news.cmc.net</p>
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</blockquote>
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<p>Welcome to mod_rewrite, the Swiss Army Knife of URL
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manipulation!</p>
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<p>This module uses a rule-based rewriting engine (based on a
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regular-expression parser) to rewrite requested URLs on the
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fly. It supports an unlimited number of rules and an
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unlimited number of attached rule conditions for each rule to
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provide a really flexible and powerful URL manipulation
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mechanism. The URL manipulations can depend on various tests,
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for instance server variables, environment variables, HTTP
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headers, time stamps and even external database lookups in
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various formats can be used to achieve a really granular URL
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matching.</p>
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<p>This module operates on the full URLs (including the
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path-info part) both in per-server context
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(<code>httpd.conf</code>) and per-directory context
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(<code>.htaccess</code>) and can even generate query-string
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parts on result. The rewritten result can lead to internal
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sub-processing, external request redirection or even to an
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internal proxy throughput.</p>
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<p>But all this functionality and flexibility has its
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drawback: complexity. So don't expect to understand this
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entire module in just one day.</p>
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<p>This module was invented and originally written in April
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1996 and gifted exclusively to the The Apache Group in July 1997
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by</p>
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<p class="indent">
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<a href="http://www.engelschall.com/"><code>Ralf S.
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Engelschall</code></a><br />
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<a href="mailto:rse@engelschall.com"><code>rse@engelschall.com</code></a><br />
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<a href="http://www.engelschall.com/"><code>www.engelschall.com</code></a>
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</p>
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</div>
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<div id="quickview"><h3 class="directives">Directives</h3>
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<ul id="toc">
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#rewritebase">RewriteBase</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#rewritecond">RewriteCond</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#rewriteengine">RewriteEngine</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#rewritelock">RewriteLock</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#rewritelog">RewriteLog</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#rewriteloglevel">RewriteLogLevel</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#rewritemap">RewriteMap</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#rewriteoptions">RewriteOptions</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#rewriterule">RewriteRule</a></li>
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</ul>
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<h3>Topics</h3>
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<ul id="topics">
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Internal">Internal Processing</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#EnvVar">Environment Variables</a></li>
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<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Solutions">Practical Solutions</a></li>
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</ul></div>
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<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
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<div class="section">
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<h2><a name="Internal" id="Internal">Internal Processing</a></h2>
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<p>The internal processing of this module is very complex but
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needs to be explained once even to the average user to avoid
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common mistakes and to let you exploit its full
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functionality.</p>
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<h3><a name="InternalAPI" id="InternalAPI">API Phases</a></h3>
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<p>First you have to understand that when Apache processes a
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HTTP request it does this in phases. A hook for each of these
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phases is provided by the Apache API. Mod_rewrite uses two of
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these hooks: the URL-to-filename translation hook which is
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used after the HTTP request has been read but before any
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authorization starts and the Fixup hook which is triggered
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after the authorization phases and after the per-directory
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config files (<code>.htaccess</code>) have been read, but
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before the content handler is activated.</p>
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<p>So, after a request comes in and Apache has determined the
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corresponding server (or virtual server) the rewriting engine
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starts processing of all mod_rewrite directives from the
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per-server configuration in the URL-to-filename phase. A few
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steps later when the final data directories are found, the
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per-directory configuration directives of mod_rewrite are
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triggered in the Fixup phase. In both situations mod_rewrite
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rewrites URLs either to new URLs or to filenames, although
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there is no obvious distinction between them. This is a usage
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of the API which was not intended to be this way when the API
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was designed, but as of Apache 1.x this is the only way
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mod_rewrite can operate. To make this point more clear
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remember the following two points:</p>
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<ol>
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<li>Although mod_rewrite rewrites URLs to URLs, URLs to
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filenames and even filenames to filenames, the API
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currently provides only a URL-to-filename hook. In Apache
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2.0 the two missing hooks will be added to make the
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processing more clear. But this point has no drawbacks for
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the user, it is just a fact which should be remembered:
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Apache does more in the URL-to-filename hook than the API
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intends for it.</li>
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<li>
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Unbelievably mod_rewrite provides URL manipulations in
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per-directory context, <em>i.e.</em>, within
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<code>.htaccess</code> files, although these are reached
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a very long time after the URLs have been translated to
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filenames. It has to be this way because
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<code>.htaccess</code> files live in the filesystem, so
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processing has already reached this stage. In other
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words: According to the API phases at this time it is too
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late for any URL manipulations. To overcome this chicken
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and egg problem mod_rewrite uses a trick: When you
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manipulate a URL/filename in per-directory context
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mod_rewrite first rewrites the filename back to its
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corresponding URL (which is usually impossible, but see
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the <code>RewriteBase</code> directive below for the
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trick to achieve this) and then initiates a new internal
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sub-request with the new URL. This restarts processing of
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the API phases.
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<p>Again mod_rewrite tries hard to make this complicated
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step totally transparent to the user, but you should
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remember here: While URL manipulations in per-server
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context are really fast and efficient, per-directory
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rewrites are slow and inefficient due to this chicken and
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egg problem. But on the other hand this is the only way
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mod_rewrite can provide (locally restricted) URL
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manipulations to the average user.</p>
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</li>
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</ol>
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<p>Don't forget these two points!</p>
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<h3><a name="InternalRuleset" id="InternalRuleset">Ruleset Processing</a></h3>
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<p>Now when mod_rewrite is triggered in these two API phases, it
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reads the configured rulesets from its configuration
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structure (which itself was either created on startup for
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per-server context or during the directory walk of the Apache
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kernel for per-directory context). Then the URL rewriting
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engine is started with the contained ruleset (one or more
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rules together with their conditions). The operation of the
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URL rewriting engine itself is exactly the same for both
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configuration contexts. Only the final result processing is
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different. </p>
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<p>The order of rules in the ruleset is important because the
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rewriting engine processes them in a special (and not very
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obvious) order. The rule is this: The rewriting engine loops
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through the ruleset rule by rule (<code class="directive"><a href="#rewriterule">RewriteRule</a></code> directives) and
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when a particular rule matches it optionally loops through
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existing corresponding conditions (<code>RewriteCond</code>
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||
directives). For historical reasons the conditions are given
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first, and so the control flow is a little bit long-winded. See
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Figure 1 for more details.</p>
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<p class="figure">
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<img src="../images/mod_rewrite_fig1.gif" width="428" height="385" alt="[Needs graphics capability to display]" /><br />
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<dfn>Figure 1:</dfn>The control flow through the rewriting ruleset
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</p>
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<p>As you can see, first the URL is matched against the
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<em>Pattern</em> of each rule. When it fails mod_rewrite
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immediately stops processing this rule and continues with the
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next rule. If the <em>Pattern</em> matches, mod_rewrite looks
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for corresponding rule conditions. If none are present, it
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just substitutes the URL with a new value which is
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constructed from the string <em>Substitution</em> and goes on
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with its rule-looping. But if conditions exist, it starts an
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inner loop for processing them in the order that they are
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listed. For conditions the logic is different: we don't match
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a pattern against the current URL. Instead we first create a
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string <em>TestString</em> by expanding variables,
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back-references, map lookups, <em>etc.</em> and then we try
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to match <em>CondPattern</em> against it. If the pattern
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doesn't match, the complete set of conditions and the
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corresponding rule fails. If the pattern matches, then the
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next condition is processed until no more conditions are
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available. If all conditions match, processing is continued
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with the substitution of the URL with
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<em>Substitution</em>.</p>
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|
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<h3><a name="quoting" id="quoting">Quoting Special Characters</a></h3>
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||
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<p>As of Apache 1.3.20, special characters in
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<em>TestString</em> and <em>Substitution</em> strings can be
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escaped (that is, treated as normal characters without their
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||
usual special meaning) by prefixing them with a slosh ('\')
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||
character. In other words, you can include an actual
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dollar-sign character in a <em>Substitution</em> string by
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using '<code>\$</code>'; this keeps mod_rewrite from trying
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to treat it as a backreference.</p>
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<h3><a name="InternalBackRefs" id="InternalBackRefs">Regex Back-Reference Availability</a></h3>
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<p>One important thing here has to be remembered: Whenever you
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use parentheses in <em>Pattern</em> or in one of the
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<em>CondPattern</em>, back-references are internally created
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which can be used with the strings <code>$N</code> and
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<code>%N</code> (see below). These are available for creating
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the strings <em>Substitution</em> and <em>TestString</em>.
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Figure 2 shows to which locations the back-references are
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transfered for expansion.</p>
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<p class="figure">
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<img src="../images/mod_rewrite_fig2.gif" width="381" height="179" alt="[Needs graphics capability to display]" /><br />
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<dfn>Figure 2:</dfn> The back-reference flow through a rule.
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</p>
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<p>We know this was a crash course on mod_rewrite's internal
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processing. But you will benefit from this knowledge when
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reading the following documentation of the available
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directives.</p>
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</div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
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<div class="section">
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<h2><a name="EnvVar" id="EnvVar">Environment Variables</a></h2>
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<p>This module keeps track of two additional (non-standard)
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CGI/SSI environment variables named <code>SCRIPT_URL</code>
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and <code>SCRIPT_URI</code>. These contain the
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<em>logical</em> Web-view to the current resource, while the
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standard CGI/SSI variables <code>SCRIPT_NAME</code> and
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<code>SCRIPT_FILENAME</code> contain the <em>physical</em>
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System-view. </p>
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<p>Notice: These variables hold the URI/URL <em>as they were
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initially requested</em>, <em>i.e.</em>, <em>before</em> any
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rewriting. This is important because the rewriting process is
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primarily used to rewrite logical URLs to physical
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pathnames.</p>
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<div class="example"><h3>Example</h3><pre>
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SCRIPT_NAME=/sw/lib/w3s/tree/global/u/rse/.www/index.html
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SCRIPT_FILENAME=/u/rse/.www/index.html
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SCRIPT_URL=/u/rse/
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SCRIPT_URI=http://en1.engelschall.com/u/rse/
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</pre></div>
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||
</div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="section">
|
||
<h2><a name="Solutions" id="Solutions">Practical Solutions</a></h2>
|
||
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<p>We also have an <a href="../misc/rewriteguide.html">URL
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Rewriting Guide</a> available, which provides a collection of
|
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practical solutions for URL-based problems. There you can
|
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find real-life rulesets and additional information about
|
||
mod_rewrite.</p>
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="directive-section"><h2><a name="RewriteBase" id="RewriteBase">RewriteBase</a> <a name="rewritebase" id="rewritebase">Directive</a></h2>
|
||
<table class="directive">
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Sets the base URL for per-directory rewrites</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax">Syntax:</a></th><td><code>RewriteBase <em>URL-path</em></code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Default">Default:</a></th><td><code>See usage for information.</code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Context">Context:</a></th><td>directory, .htaccess</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Override">Override:</a></th><td>FileInfo</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Module">Module:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite</td></tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
<p>The <code class="directive">RewriteBase</code> directive explicitly
|
||
sets the base URL for per-directory rewrites. As you will see
|
||
below, <code class="directive"><a href="#rewriterule">RewriteRule</a></code>
|
||
can be used in per-directory config files
|
||
(<code>.htaccess</code>). There it will act locally,
|
||
<em>i.e.</em>, the local directory prefix is stripped at this
|
||
stage of processing and your rewriting rules act only on the
|
||
remainder. At the end it is automatically added back to the
|
||
path. The default setting is; <code class="directive">RewriteBase</code> <em>physical-directory-path</em></p>
|
||
|
||
<p>When a substitution occurs for a new URL, this module has
|
||
to re-inject the URL into the server processing. To be able
|
||
to do this it needs to know what the corresponding URL-prefix
|
||
or URL-base is. By default this prefix is the corresponding
|
||
filepath itself. <strong>But at most websites URLs are NOT
|
||
directly related to physical filename paths, so this
|
||
assumption will usually be wrong!</strong> There you have to
|
||
use the <code>RewriteBase</code> directive to specify the
|
||
correct URL-prefix.</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"> If your webserver's URLs are <strong>not</strong> directly
|
||
related to physical file paths, you have to use
|
||
<code class="directive">RewriteBase</code> in every <code>.htaccess</code>
|
||
files where you want to use <code class="directive"><a href="#rewriterule">RewriteRule</a></code> directives.
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<p> For example, assume the following per-directory config file:</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><pre>
|
||
#
|
||
# /abc/def/.htaccess -- per-dir config file for directory /abc/def
|
||
# Remember: /abc/def is the physical path of /xyz, <em>i.e.</em>, the server
|
||
# has a 'Alias /xyz /abc/def' directive <em>e.g.</em>
|
||
#
|
||
|
||
RewriteEngine On
|
||
|
||
# let the server know that we were reached via /xyz and not
|
||
# via the physical path prefix /abc/def
|
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RewriteBase /xyz
|
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|
||
# now the rewriting rules
|
||
RewriteRule ^oldstuff\.html$ newstuff.html
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
<p>In the above example, a request to
|
||
<code>/xyz/oldstuff.html</code> gets correctly rewritten to
|
||
the physical file <code>/abc/def/newstuff.html</code>.</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><h3>For Apache Hackers</h3>
|
||
<p>The following list gives detailed information about
|
||
the internal processing steps:</p>
|
||
<pre>
|
||
Request:
|
||
/xyz/oldstuff.html
|
||
|
||
Internal Processing:
|
||
/xyz/oldstuff.html -> /abc/def/oldstuff.html (per-server Alias)
|
||
/abc/def/oldstuff.html -> /abc/def/newstuff.html (per-dir RewriteRule)
|
||
/abc/def/newstuff.html -> /xyz/newstuff.html (per-dir RewriteBase)
|
||
/xyz/newstuff.html -> /abc/def/newstuff.html (per-server Alias)
|
||
|
||
Result:
|
||
/abc/def/newstuff.html
|
||
</pre>
|
||
<p>This seems very complicated but is
|
||
the correct Apache internal processing, because the
|
||
per-directory rewriting comes too late in the
|
||
process. So, when it occurs the (rewritten) request
|
||
has to be re-injected into the Apache kernel! BUT:
|
||
While this seems like a serious overhead, it really
|
||
isn't, because this re-injection happens fully
|
||
internally to the Apache server and the same
|
||
procedure is used by many other operations inside
|
||
Apache. So, you can be sure the design and
|
||
implementation is correct.</p>
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="directive-section"><h2><a name="RewriteCond" id="RewriteCond">RewriteCond</a> <a name="rewritecond" id="rewritecond">Directive</a></h2>
|
||
<table class="directive">
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Defines a condition under which rewriting will take place
|
||
</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax">Syntax:</a></th><td><code> RewriteCond
|
||
<em>TestString</em> <em>CondPattern</em></code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Context">Context:</a></th><td>server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Override">Override:</a></th><td>FileInfo</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Module">Module:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite</td></tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
<p>The <code class="directive">RewriteCond</code> directive defines a
|
||
rule condition. Precede a <code class="directive"><a href="#rewriterule">RewriteRule</a></code> directive with one
|
||
or more <code class="directive">RewriteCond</code> directives. The following
|
||
rewriting rule is only used if its pattern matches the current
|
||
state of the URI <strong>and</strong> if these additional
|
||
conditions apply too.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p><em>TestString</em> is a string which can contains the
|
||
following expanded constructs in addition to plain text:</p>
|
||
|
||
<ul>
|
||
<li>
|
||
<strong>RewriteRule backreferences</strong>: These are
|
||
backreferences of the form
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<strong><code>$N</code></strong>
|
||
</p>
|
||
(0 <= N <= 9) which provide access to the grouped
|
||
parts (parenthesis!) of the pattern from the
|
||
corresponding <code>RewriteRule</code> directive (the one
|
||
following the current bunch of <code>RewriteCond</code>
|
||
directives).
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
<strong>RewriteCond backreferences</strong>: These are
|
||
backreferences of the form
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<strong><code>%N</code></strong>
|
||
</p>
|
||
(1 <= N <= 9) which provide access to the grouped
|
||
parts (parentheses!) of the pattern from the last matched
|
||
<code>RewriteCond</code> directive in the current bunch
|
||
of conditions.
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
<strong>RewriteMap expansions</strong>: These are
|
||
expansions of the form
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<strong><code>${mapname:key|default}</code></strong>
|
||
</p>
|
||
See <a href="#mapfunc">the documentation for
|
||
RewriteMap</a> for more details.
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
<strong>Server-Variables</strong>: These are variables of
|
||
the form
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<strong><code>%{</code> <em>NAME_OF_VARIABLE</em>
|
||
<code>}</code></strong>
|
||
</p>
|
||
where <em>NAME_OF_VARIABLE</em> can be a string taken
|
||
from the following list:
|
||
|
||
<table>
|
||
<tr>
|
||
<th>HTTP headers:</th> <th>connection & request:</th> <th />
|
||
</tr>
|
||
|
||
<tr>
|
||
<td>
|
||
HTTP_USER_AGENT<br />
|
||
HTTP_REFERER<br />
|
||
HTTP_COOKIE<br />
|
||
HTTP_FORWARDED<br />
|
||
HTTP_HOST<br />
|
||
HTTP_PROXY_CONNECTION<br />
|
||
HTTP_ACCEPT<br />
|
||
</td>
|
||
|
||
<td>
|
||
REMOTE_ADDR<br />
|
||
REMOTE_HOST<br />
|
||
REMOTE_PORT<br />
|
||
REMOTE_USER<br />
|
||
REMOTE_IDENT<br />
|
||
REQUEST_METHOD<br />
|
||
SCRIPT_FILENAME<br />
|
||
PATH_INFO<br />
|
||
QUERY_STRING<br />
|
||
AUTH_TYPE<br />
|
||
</td>
|
||
|
||
<td />
|
||
</tr>
|
||
|
||
<tr>
|
||
<th>server internals:</th> <th>system stuff:</th> <th>specials:</th>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
|
||
<tr>
|
||
<td>
|
||
DOCUMENT_ROOT<br />
|
||
SERVER_ADMIN<br />
|
||
SERVER_NAME<br />
|
||
SERVER_ADDR<br />
|
||
SERVER_PORT<br />
|
||
SERVER_PROTOCOL<br />
|
||
SERVER_SOFTWARE<br />
|
||
</td>
|
||
|
||
<td>
|
||
TIME_YEAR<br />
|
||
TIME_MON<br />
|
||
TIME_DAY<br />
|
||
TIME_HOUR<br />
|
||
TIME_MIN<br />
|
||
TIME_SEC<br />
|
||
TIME_WDAY<br />
|
||
TIME<br />
|
||
</td>
|
||
|
||
<td>
|
||
API_VERSION<br />
|
||
THE_REQUEST<br />
|
||
REQUEST_URI<br />
|
||
REQUEST_FILENAME<br />
|
||
IS_SUBREQ<br />
|
||
HTTPS<br />
|
||
</td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note">
|
||
<p>These variables all
|
||
correspond to the similarly named HTTP
|
||
MIME-headers, C variables of the Apache server or
|
||
<code>struct tm</code> fields of the Unix system.
|
||
Most are documented elsewhere in the Manual or in
|
||
the CGI specification. Those that are special to
|
||
mod_rewrite include:</p>
|
||
|
||
<dl>
|
||
<dt><code>IS_SUBREQ</code></dt>
|
||
|
||
<dd>Will contain the text "true" if the request
|
||
currently being processed is a sub-request,
|
||
"false" otherwise. Sub-requests may be generated
|
||
by modules that need to resolve additional files
|
||
or URIs in order to complete their tasks.</dd>
|
||
|
||
<dt><code>API_VERSION</code></dt>
|
||
|
||
<dd>This is the version of the Apache module API
|
||
(the internal interface between server and
|
||
module) in the current httpd build, as defined in
|
||
include/ap_mmn.h. The module API version
|
||
corresponds to the version of Apache in use (in
|
||
the release version of Apache 1.3.14, for
|
||
instance, it is 19990320:10), but is mainly of
|
||
interest to module authors.</dd>
|
||
|
||
<dt><code>THE_REQUEST</code></dt>
|
||
|
||
<dd>The full HTTP request line sent by the
|
||
browser to the server (e.g., "<code>GET
|
||
/index.html HTTP/1.1</code>"). This does not
|
||
include any additional headers sent by the
|
||
browser.</dd>
|
||
|
||
<dt><code>REQUEST_URI</code></dt>
|
||
|
||
<dd>The resource requested in the HTTP request
|
||
line. (In the example above, this would be
|
||
"/index.html".)</dd>
|
||
|
||
<dt><code>REQUEST_FILENAME</code></dt>
|
||
|
||
<dd>The full local filesystem path to the file or
|
||
script matching the request.</dd>
|
||
|
||
<dt><code>HTTPS</code></dt>
|
||
|
||
<dd>Will contain the text "on" if the connection is
|
||
using SSL/TLS, or "off" otherwise. (This variable
|
||
can be safely used regardless of whether
|
||
<code class="module"><a href="../mod/mod_ssl.html">mod_ssl</a></code> is loaded).</dd>
|
||
|
||
</dl>
|
||
</div>
|
||
</li>
|
||
</ul>
|
||
|
||
<p>Special Notes:</p>
|
||
|
||
<ol>
|
||
<li>The variables SCRIPT_FILENAME and REQUEST_FILENAME
|
||
contain the same value, <em>i.e.</em>, the value of the
|
||
<code>filename</code> field of the internal
|
||
<code>request_rec</code> structure of the Apache server.
|
||
The first name is just the commonly known CGI variable name
|
||
while the second is the consistent counterpart to
|
||
REQUEST_URI (which contains the value of the
|
||
<code>uri</code> field of <code>request_rec</code>).</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>There is the special format:
|
||
<code>%{ENV:variable}</code> where <em>variable</em> can be
|
||
any environment variable. This is looked-up via internal
|
||
Apache structures and (if not found there) via
|
||
<code>getenv()</code> from the Apache server process.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>There is the special format:
|
||
<code>%{SSL:variable}</code> where <em>variable</em> is the
|
||
name of an <a href="mod_ssl.html#envvars">SSL environment
|
||
variable</a>; this can be used whether or not
|
||
<code class="module"><a href="../mod/mod_ssl.html">mod_ssl</a></code> is loaded, but will always expand to
|
||
the empty string if it is not. Example:
|
||
<code>%{SSL:SSL_CIPHER_USEKEYSIZE}</code> may expand to
|
||
<code>128</code>.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>There is the special format:
|
||
<code>%{HTTP:header}</code> where <em>header</em> can be
|
||
any HTTP MIME-header name. This is looked-up from the HTTP
|
||
request. Example: <code>%{HTTP:Proxy-Connection}</code> is
|
||
the value of the HTTP header
|
||
``<code>Proxy-Connection:</code>''.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>There is the special format
|
||
<code>%{LA-U:variable}</code> for look-aheads which perform
|
||
an internal (URL-based) sub-request to determine the final
|
||
value of <em>variable</em>. Use this when you want to use a
|
||
variable for rewriting which is actually set later in an
|
||
API phase and thus is not available at the current stage.
|
||
For instance when you want to rewrite according to the
|
||
<code>REMOTE_USER</code> variable from within the
|
||
per-server context (<code>httpd.conf</code> file) you have
|
||
to use <code>%{LA-U:REMOTE_USER}</code> because this
|
||
variable is set by the authorization phases which come
|
||
<em>after</em> the URL translation phase where mod_rewrite
|
||
operates. On the other hand, because mod_rewrite implements
|
||
its per-directory context (<code>.htaccess</code> file) via
|
||
the Fixup phase of the API and because the authorization
|
||
phases come <em>before</em> this phase, you just can use
|
||
<code>%{REMOTE_USER}</code> there.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>There is the special format:
|
||
<code>%{LA-F:variable}</code> which performs an internal
|
||
(filename-based) sub-request to determine the final value
|
||
of <em>variable</em>. Most of the time this is the same as
|
||
LA-U above.</li>
|
||
</ol>
|
||
|
||
<p><em>CondPattern</em> is the condition pattern,
|
||
<em>i.e.</em>, a regular expression which is applied to the
|
||
current instance of the <em>TestString</em>, <em>i.e.</em>,
|
||
<em>TestString</em> is evaluated and then matched against
|
||
<em>CondPattern</em>.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p><strong>Remember:</strong> <em>CondPattern</em> is a
|
||
<em>perl compatible regular expression</em> with some
|
||
additions:</p>
|
||
|
||
<ol>
|
||
<li>You can prefix the pattern string with a
|
||
'<code>!</code>' character (exclamation mark) to specify a
|
||
<strong>non</strong>-matching pattern.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
There are some special variants of <em>CondPatterns</em>.
|
||
Instead of real regular expression strings you can also
|
||
use one of the following:
|
||
|
||
<ul>
|
||
<li>'<strong><CondPattern</strong>' (is lexically
|
||
lower)<br />
|
||
Treats the <em>CondPattern</em> as a plain string and
|
||
compares it lexically to <em>TestString</em>. True if
|
||
<em>TestString</em> is lexically lower than
|
||
<em>CondPattern</em>.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong>>CondPattern</strong>' (is lexically
|
||
greater)<br />
|
||
Treats the <em>CondPattern</em> as a plain string and
|
||
compares it lexically to <em>TestString</em>. True if
|
||
<em>TestString</em> is lexically greater than
|
||
<em>CondPattern</em>.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong>=CondPattern</strong>' (is lexically
|
||
equal)<br />
|
||
Treats the <em>CondPattern</em> as a plain string and
|
||
compares it lexically to <em>TestString</em>. True if
|
||
<em>TestString</em> is lexically equal to
|
||
<em>CondPattern</em>, i.e the two strings are exactly
|
||
equal (character by character). If <em>CondPattern</em>
|
||
is just <code>""</code> (two quotation marks) this
|
||
compares <em>TestString</em> to the empty string.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong>-d</strong>' (is
|
||
<strong>d</strong>irectory)<br />
|
||
Treats the <em>TestString</em> as a pathname and tests
|
||
if it exists and is a directory.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong>-f</strong>' (is regular
|
||
<strong>f</strong>ile)<br />
|
||
Treats the <em>TestString</em> as a pathname and tests
|
||
if it exists and is a regular file.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong>-s</strong>' (is regular file with
|
||
<strong>s</strong>ize)<br />
|
||
Treats the <em>TestString</em> as a pathname and tests
|
||
if it exists and is a regular file with size greater
|
||
than zero.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong>-l</strong>' (is symbolic
|
||
<strong>l</strong>ink)<br />
|
||
Treats the <em>TestString</em> as a pathname and tests
|
||
if it exists and is a symbolic link.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong>-x</strong>' (has e<strong>x</strong>ecutable
|
||
permissions)<br />
|
||
Treats the <em>TestString</em> as a pathname and tests
|
||
if it exists and has execution permissions. These permissions
|
||
are determined depending on the underlying OS.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong>-F</strong>' (is existing file via
|
||
subrequest)<br />
|
||
Checks if <em>TestString</em> is a valid file and
|
||
accessible via all the server's currently-configured
|
||
access controls for that path. This uses an internal
|
||
subrequest to determine the check, so use it with care
|
||
because it decreases your servers performance!</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong>-U</strong>' (is existing URL via
|
||
subrequest)<br />
|
||
Checks if <em>TestString</em> is a valid URL and
|
||
accessible via all the server's currently-configured
|
||
access controls for that path. This uses an internal
|
||
subrequest to determine the check, so use it with care
|
||
because it decreases your server's performance!</li>
|
||
</ul>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><h3>Notice</h3>
|
||
All of these tests can
|
||
also be prefixed by an exclamation mark ('!') to
|
||
negate their meaning.
|
||
</div>
|
||
</li>
|
||
</ol>
|
||
|
||
<p>Additionally you can set special flags for
|
||
<em>CondPattern</em> by appending</p>
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<strong><code>[</code><em>flags</em><code>]</code></strong>
|
||
</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>as the third argument to the <code>RewriteCond</code>
|
||
directive. <em>Flags</em> is a comma-separated list of the
|
||
following flags:</p>
|
||
|
||
<ul>
|
||
<li>'<strong><code>nocase|NC</code></strong>'
|
||
(<strong>n</strong>o <strong>c</strong>ase)<br />
|
||
This makes the test case-insensitive, <em>i.e.</em>, there
|
||
is no difference between 'A-Z' and 'a-z' both in the
|
||
expanded <em>TestString</em> and the <em>CondPattern</em>.
|
||
This flag is effective only for comparisons between
|
||
<em>TestString</em> and <em>CondPattern</em>. It has no
|
||
effect on filesystem and subrequest checks.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>ornext|OR</code></strong>'
|
||
(<strong>or</strong> next condition)<br />
|
||
Use this to combine rule conditions with a local OR
|
||
instead of the implicit AND. Typical example:
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><pre>
|
||
RewriteCond %{REMOTE_HOST} ^host1.* [OR]
|
||
RewriteCond %{REMOTE_HOST} ^host2.* [OR]
|
||
RewriteCond %{REMOTE_HOST} ^host3.*
|
||
RewriteRule ...some special stuff for any of these hosts...
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
Without this flag you would have to write the cond/rule
|
||
three times.
|
||
</li>
|
||
</ul>
|
||
|
||
<p><strong>Example:</strong></p>
|
||
|
||
<p>To rewrite the Homepage of a site according to the
|
||
``<code>User-Agent:</code>'' header of the request, you can
|
||
use the following: </p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><pre>
|
||
RewriteCond %{HTTP_USER_AGENT} ^Mozilla.*
|
||
RewriteRule ^/$ /homepage.max.html [L]
|
||
|
||
RewriteCond %{HTTP_USER_AGENT} ^Lynx.*
|
||
RewriteRule ^/$ /homepage.min.html [L]
|
||
|
||
RewriteRule ^/$ /homepage.std.html [L]
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
<p>Interpretation: If you use Netscape Navigator as your
|
||
browser (which identifies itself as 'Mozilla'), then you
|
||
get the max homepage, which includes Frames, <em>etc.</em>
|
||
If you use the Lynx browser (which is Terminal-based), then
|
||
you get the min homepage, which contains no images, no
|
||
tables, <em>etc.</em> If you use any other browser you get
|
||
the standard homepage.</p>
|
||
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="directive-section"><h2><a name="RewriteEngine" id="RewriteEngine">RewriteEngine</a> <a name="rewriteengine" id="rewriteengine">Directive</a></h2>
|
||
<table class="directive">
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Enables or disables runtime rewriting engine</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax">Syntax:</a></th><td><code>RewriteEngine on|off</code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Default">Default:</a></th><td><code>RewriteEngine off</code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Context">Context:</a></th><td>server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Override">Override:</a></th><td>FileInfo</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Module">Module:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite</td></tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
|
||
<p>The <code class="directive">RewriteEngine</code> directive enables or
|
||
disables the runtime rewriting engine. If it is set to
|
||
<code>off</code> this module does no runtime processing at
|
||
all. It does not even update the <code>SCRIPT_URx</code>
|
||
environment variables.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Use this directive to disable the module instead of
|
||
commenting out all the <code class="directive"><a href="#rewriterule">RewriteRule</a></code> directives!</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Note that, by default, rewrite configurations are not
|
||
inherited. This means that you need to have a
|
||
<code>RewriteEngine on</code> directive for each virtual host
|
||
in which you wish to use it.</p>
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="directive-section"><h2><a name="RewriteLock" id="RewriteLock">RewriteLock</a> <a name="rewritelock" id="rewritelock">Directive</a></h2>
|
||
<table class="directive">
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Sets the name of the lock file used for RewriteMap
|
||
synchronization</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax">Syntax:</a></th><td><code>RewriteLock <em>file-path</em></code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Context">Context:</a></th><td>server config</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Module">Module:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite</td></tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
<p>This directive sets the filename for a synchronization
|
||
lockfile which mod_rewrite needs to communicate with <code class="directive"><a href="#rewritemap">RewriteMap</a></code>
|
||
<em>programs</em>. Set this lockfile to a local path (not on a
|
||
NFS-mounted device) when you want to use a rewriting
|
||
map-program. It is not required for other types of rewriting
|
||
maps.</p>
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="directive-section"><h2><a name="RewriteLog" id="RewriteLog">RewriteLog</a> <a name="rewritelog" id="rewritelog">Directive</a></h2>
|
||
<table class="directive">
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Sets the name of the file used for logging rewrite engine
|
||
processing</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax">Syntax:</a></th><td><code>RewriteLog <em>file-path</em></code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Context">Context:</a></th><td>server config, virtual host</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Module">Module:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite</td></tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
<p>The <code class="directive">RewriteLog</code> directive sets the name
|
||
of the file to which the server logs any rewriting actions it
|
||
performs. If the name does not begin with a slash
|
||
('<code>/</code>') then it is assumed to be relative to the
|
||
<em>Server Root</em>. The directive should occur only once per
|
||
server config.</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"> To disable the logging of
|
||
rewriting actions it is not recommended to set
|
||
<em>Filename</em> to <code>/dev/null</code>, because
|
||
although the rewriting engine does not then output to a
|
||
logfile it still creates the logfile output internally.
|
||
<strong>This will slow down the server with no advantage
|
||
to the administrator!</strong> To disable logging either
|
||
remove or comment out the <code class="directive">RewriteLog</code>
|
||
directive or use <code>RewriteLogLevel 0</code>!
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><h3>Security</h3>
|
||
|
||
See the <a href="../misc/security_tips.html">Apache Security Tips</a>
|
||
document for details on why your security could be compromised if the
|
||
directory where logfiles are stored is writable by anyone other than
|
||
the user that starts the server.
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><h3>Example</h3><p><code>
|
||
RewriteLog "/usr/local/var/apache/logs/rewrite.log"
|
||
</code></p></div>
|
||
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="directive-section"><h2><a name="RewriteLogLevel" id="RewriteLogLevel">RewriteLogLevel</a> <a name="rewriteloglevel" id="rewriteloglevel">Directive</a></h2>
|
||
<table class="directive">
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Sets the verbosity of the log file used by the rewrite
|
||
engine</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax">Syntax:</a></th><td><code>RewriteLogLevel <em>Level</em></code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Default">Default:</a></th><td><code>RewriteLogLevel 0</code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Context">Context:</a></th><td>server config, virtual host</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Module">Module:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite</td></tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
<p>The <code class="directive">RewriteLogLevel</code> directive sets the
|
||
verbosity level of the rewriting logfile. The default level 0
|
||
means no logging, while 9 or more means that practically all
|
||
actions are logged.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>To disable the logging of rewriting actions simply set
|
||
<em>Level</em> to 0. This disables all rewrite action
|
||
logs.</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"> Using a high value for
|
||
<em>Level</em> will slow down your Apache server
|
||
dramatically! Use the rewriting logfile at a
|
||
<em>Level</em> greater than 2 only for debugging!
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><h3>Example</h3><p><code>
|
||
RewriteLogLevel 3
|
||
</code></p></div>
|
||
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="directive-section"><h2><a name="RewriteMap" id="RewriteMap">RewriteMap</a> <a name="rewritemap" id="rewritemap">Directive</a></h2>
|
||
<table class="directive">
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Defines a mapping function for key-lookup</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax">Syntax:</a></th><td><code>RewriteMap <em>MapName</em> <em>MapType</em>:<em>MapSource</em>
|
||
</code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Context">Context:</a></th><td>server config, virtual host</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Module">Module:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Compatibility">Compatibility:</a></th><td>The choice of different dbm types is available in
|
||
Apache 2.0.41 and later</td></tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
<p>The <code class="directive">RewriteMap</code> directive defines a
|
||
<em>Rewriting Map</em> which can be used inside rule
|
||
substitution strings by the mapping-functions to
|
||
insert/substitute fields through a key lookup. The source of
|
||
this lookup can be of various types.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>The <a id="mapfunc" name="mapfunc"><em>MapName</em></a> is
|
||
the name of the map and will be used to specify a
|
||
mapping-function for the substitution strings of a rewriting
|
||
rule via one of the following constructs:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<strong><code>${</code> <em>MapName</em> <code>:</code>
|
||
<em>LookupKey</em> <code>}</code><br />
|
||
<code>${</code> <em>MapName</em> <code>:</code>
|
||
<em>LookupKey</em> <code>|</code> <em>DefaultValue</em>
|
||
<code>}</code></strong>
|
||
</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>When such a construct occurs the map <em>MapName</em> is
|
||
consulted and the key <em>LookupKey</em> is looked-up. If the
|
||
key is found, the map-function construct is substituted by
|
||
<em>SubstValue</em>. If the key is not found then it is
|
||
substituted by <em>DefaultValue</em> or by the empty string
|
||
if no <em>DefaultValue</em> was specified.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>The following combinations for <em>MapType</em> and
|
||
<em>MapSource</em> can be used:</p>
|
||
|
||
<ul>
|
||
<li>
|
||
<strong>Standard Plain Text</strong><br />
|
||
MapType: <code>txt</code>, MapSource: Unix filesystem
|
||
path to valid regular file
|
||
|
||
<p>This is the standard rewriting map feature where the
|
||
<em>MapSource</em> is a plain ASCII file containing
|
||
either blank lines, comment lines (starting with a '#'
|
||
character) or pairs like the following - one per
|
||
line.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<strong><em>MatchingKey</em>
|
||
<em>SubstValue</em></strong>
|
||
</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><h3>Example</h3><pre>
|
||
##
|
||
## map.txt -- rewriting map
|
||
##
|
||
|
||
Ralf.S.Engelschall rse # Bastard Operator From Hell
|
||
Mr.Joe.Average joe # Mr. Average
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><p><code>
|
||
RewriteMap real-to-user txt:/path/to/file/map.txt
|
||
</code></p></div>
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
<strong>Randomized Plain Text</strong><br />
|
||
MapType: <code>rnd</code>, MapSource: Unix filesystem
|
||
path to valid regular file
|
||
|
||
<p>This is identical to the Standard Plain Text variant
|
||
above but with a special post-processing feature: After
|
||
looking up a value it is parsed according to contained
|
||
``<code>|</code>'' characters which have the meaning of
|
||
``or''. In other words they indicate a set of
|
||
alternatives from which the actual returned value is
|
||
chosen randomly. Although this sounds crazy and useless,
|
||
it was actually designed for load balancing in a reverse
|
||
proxy situation where the looked up values are server
|
||
names. Example:</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><pre>
|
||
##
|
||
## map.txt -- rewriting map
|
||
##
|
||
|
||
static www1|www2|www3|www4
|
||
dynamic www5|www6
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><p><code>
|
||
RewriteMap servers rnd:/path/to/file/map.txt
|
||
</code></p></div>
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
<strong>Hash File</strong><br /> MapType:
|
||
<code>dbm[=<em>type</em>]</code>, MapSource: Unix filesystem
|
||
path to valid regular file
|
||
|
||
<p>Here the source is a binary format DBM file containing
|
||
the same contents as a <em>Plain Text</em> format file, but
|
||
in a special representation which is optimized for really
|
||
fast lookups. The <em>type</em> can be sdbm, gdbm, ndbm, or
|
||
db depending on <a href="../install.html#dbm">compile-time
|
||
settings</a>. If the <em>type</em> is omitted, the
|
||
compile-time default will be chosen. You can create such a
|
||
file with any DBM tool or with the following Perl
|
||
script. Be sure to adjust it to create the appropriate
|
||
type of DBM. The example creates an NDBM file.</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><pre>
|
||
#!/path/to/bin/perl
|
||
##
|
||
## txt2dbm -- convert txt map to dbm format
|
||
##
|
||
|
||
use NDBM_File;
|
||
use Fcntl;
|
||
|
||
($txtmap, $dbmmap) = @ARGV;
|
||
|
||
open(TXT, "<$txtmap") or die "Couldn't open $txtmap!\n";
|
||
tie (%DB, 'NDBM_File', $dbmmap,O_RDWR|O_TRUNC|O_CREAT, 0644)
|
||
or die "Couldn't create $dbmmap!\n";
|
||
|
||
while (<TXT>) {
|
||
next if (/^\s*#/ or /^\s*$/);
|
||
$DB{$1} = $2 if (/^\s*(\S+)\s+(\S+)/);
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
untie %DB;
|
||
close(TXT);
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><p><code>
|
||
$ txt2dbm map.txt map.db
|
||
</code></p></div>
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
<strong>Internal Function</strong><br />
|
||
MapType: <code>int</code>, MapSource: Internal Apache
|
||
function
|
||
|
||
<p>Here the source is an internal Apache function.
|
||
Currently you cannot create your own, but the following
|
||
functions already exists:</p>
|
||
|
||
<ul>
|
||
<li><strong>toupper</strong>:<br />
|
||
Converts the looked up key to all upper case.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li><strong>tolower</strong>:<br />
|
||
Converts the looked up key to all lower case.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li><strong>escape</strong>:<br />
|
||
Translates special characters in the looked up key to
|
||
hex-encodings.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li><strong>unescape</strong>:<br />
|
||
Translates hex-encodings in the looked up key back to
|
||
special characters.</li>
|
||
</ul>
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
<strong>External Rewriting Program</strong><br />
|
||
MapType: <code>prg</code>, MapSource: Unix filesystem
|
||
path to valid regular file
|
||
|
||
<p>Here the source is a program, not a map file. To
|
||
create it you can use the language of your choice, but
|
||
the result has to be a executable (<em>i.e.</em>, either
|
||
object-code or a script with the magic cookie trick
|
||
'<code>#!/path/to/interpreter</code>' as the first
|
||
line).</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>This program is started once at startup of the Apache
|
||
servers and then communicates with the rewriting engine
|
||
over its <code>stdin</code> and <code>stdout</code>
|
||
file-handles. For each map-function lookup it will
|
||
receive the key to lookup as a newline-terminated string
|
||
on <code>stdin</code>. It then has to give back the
|
||
looked-up value as a newline-terminated string on
|
||
<code>stdout</code> or the four-character string
|
||
``<code>NULL</code>'' if it fails (<em>i.e.</em>, there
|
||
is no corresponding value for the given key). A trivial
|
||
program which will implement a 1:1 map (<em>i.e.</em>,
|
||
key == value) could be:</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><pre>
|
||
#!/usr/bin/perl
|
||
$| = 1;
|
||
while (<STDIN>) {
|
||
# ...put here any transformations or lookups...
|
||
print $_;
|
||
}
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
<p>But be very careful:</p>
|
||
|
||
<ol>
|
||
<li>``<em>Keep it simple, stupid</em>'' (KISS), because
|
||
if this program hangs it will hang the Apache server
|
||
when the rule occurs.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>Avoid one common mistake: never do buffered I/O on
|
||
<code>stdout</code>! This will cause a deadloop! Hence
|
||
the ``<code>$|=1</code>'' in the above example...</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>Use the <code class="directive"><a href="#rewritelock">RewriteLock</a></code> directive to
|
||
define a lockfile mod_rewrite can use to synchronize the
|
||
communication to the program. By default no such
|
||
synchronization takes place.</li>
|
||
</ol>
|
||
</li>
|
||
</ul>
|
||
<p>The <code class="directive">RewriteMap</code> directive can occur more than
|
||
once. For each mapping-function use one
|
||
<code class="directive">RewriteMap</code> directive to declare its rewriting
|
||
mapfile. While you cannot <strong>declare</strong> a map in
|
||
per-directory context it is of course possible to
|
||
<strong>use</strong> this map in per-directory context. </p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><h3>Note</h3> For plain text and DBM format files the
|
||
looked-up keys are cached in-core until the <code>mtime</code> of the
|
||
mapfile changes or the server does a restart. This way you can have
|
||
map-functions in rules which are used for <strong>every</strong>
|
||
request. This is no problem, because the external lookup only happens
|
||
once!
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="directive-section"><h2><a name="RewriteOptions" id="RewriteOptions">RewriteOptions</a> <a name="rewriteoptions" id="rewriteoptions">Directive</a></h2>
|
||
<table class="directive">
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Sets some special options for the rewrite engine</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax">Syntax:</a></th><td><code>RewriteOptions <var>Options</var></code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Default">Default:</a></th><td><code>RewriteOptions MaxRedirects=10</code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Context">Context:</a></th><td>server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Override">Override:</a></th><td>FileInfo</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Module">Module:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Compatibility">Compatibility:</a></th><td><code>MaxRedirects</code> is available in Apache 2.0.45 and
|
||
later</td></tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
|
||
<p>The <code class="directive">RewriteOptions</code> directive sets some
|
||
special options for the current per-server or per-directory
|
||
configuration. The <em>Option</em> strings can be one of the
|
||
following:</p>
|
||
|
||
<dl>
|
||
<dt><code>inherit</code></dt>
|
||
<dd>This forces the current configuration to inherit the
|
||
configuration of the parent. In per-virtual-server context
|
||
this means that the maps, conditions and rules of the main
|
||
server are inherited. In per-directory context this means
|
||
that conditions and rules of the parent directory's
|
||
<code>.htaccess</code> configuration are inherited.</dd>
|
||
|
||
<dt><code>MaxRedirects=<var>number</var></code></dt>
|
||
<dd>In order to prevent endless loops of internal redirects
|
||
issued by per-directory <code class="directive"><a href="#rewriterule">RewriteRule</a></code>s, <code class="module"><a href="../mod/mod_rewrite.html">mod_rewrite</a></code> aborts
|
||
the request after reaching a maximum number of such redirects and
|
||
responds with an 500 Internal Server Error. If you really need
|
||
more internal redirects than 10 per request, you may increase
|
||
the default to the desired value.</dd>
|
||
</dl>
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
|
||
<div class="directive-section"><h2><a name="RewriteRule" id="RewriteRule">RewriteRule</a> <a name="rewriterule" id="rewriterule">Directive</a></h2>
|
||
<table class="directive">
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Description">Description:</a></th><td>Defines rules for the rewriting engine</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Syntax">Syntax:</a></th><td><code>RewriteRule
|
||
<em>Pattern</em> <em>Substitution</em></code></td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Context">Context:</a></th><td>server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Override">Override:</a></th><td>FileInfo</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Status">Status:</a></th><td>Extension</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Module">Module:</a></th><td>mod_rewrite</td></tr>
|
||
<tr><th><a href="directive-dict.html#Compatibility">Compatibility:</a></th><td>The cookie-flag is available in Apache 2.0.40 and later.</td></tr>
|
||
</table>
|
||
<p>The <code class="directive">RewriteRule</code> directive is the real
|
||
rewriting workhorse. The directive can occur more than once.
|
||
Each directive then defines one single rewriting rule. The
|
||
<strong>definition order</strong> of these rules is
|
||
<strong>important</strong>, because this order is used when
|
||
applying the rules at run-time.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p><a id="patterns" name="patterns"><em>Pattern</em></a> is
|
||
a perl compatible <a id="regexp" name="regexp">regular
|
||
expression</a> which gets applied to the current URL. Here
|
||
``current'' means the value of the URL when this rule gets
|
||
applied. This may not be the originally requested URL,
|
||
because any number of rules may already have matched and made
|
||
alterations to it.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Some hints about the syntax of regular expressions:</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><pre>
|
||
<strong>Text:</strong>
|
||
<strong><code>.</code></strong> Any single character
|
||
<strong><code>[</code></strong>chars<strong><code>]</code></strong> Character class: One of chars
|
||
<strong><code>[^</code></strong>chars<strong><code>]</code></strong> Character class: None of chars
|
||
text1<strong><code>|</code></strong>text2 Alternative: text1 or text2
|
||
|
||
<strong>Quantifiers:</strong>
|
||
<strong><code>?</code></strong> 0 or 1 of the preceding text
|
||
<strong><code>*</code></strong> 0 or N of the preceding text (N > 0)
|
||
<strong><code>+</code></strong> 1 or N of the preceding text (N > 1)
|
||
|
||
<strong>Grouping:</strong>
|
||
<strong><code>(</code></strong>text<strong><code>)</code></strong> Grouping of text
|
||
(either to set the borders of an alternative or
|
||
for making backreferences where the <strong>N</strong>th group can
|
||
be used on the RHS of a RewriteRule with <code>$</code><strong>N</strong>)
|
||
|
||
<strong>Anchors:</strong>
|
||
<strong><code>^</code></strong> Start of line anchor
|
||
<strong><code>$</code></strong> End of line anchor
|
||
|
||
<strong>Escaping:</strong>
|
||
<strong><code>\</code></strong>char escape that particular char
|
||
(for instance to specify the chars "<code>.[]()</code>" <em>etc.</em>)
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
<p>For more information about regular expressions have a look at the
|
||
perl regular expression manpage ("<a href="http://www.perldoc.com/perl5.6.1/pod/perlre.html">perldoc
|
||
perlre</a>"). If you are interested in more detailed
|
||
information about regular expressions and their variants
|
||
(POSIX regex <em>etc.</em>) have a look at the
|
||
following dedicated book on this topic:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<em>Mastering Regular Expressions</em><br />
|
||
Jeffrey E.F. Friedl<br />
|
||
Nutshell Handbook Series<br />
|
||
O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. 1997<br />
|
||
ISBN 1-56592-257-3<br />
|
||
</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>Additionally in mod_rewrite the NOT character
|
||
('<code>!</code>') is a possible pattern prefix. This gives
|
||
you the ability to negate a pattern; to say, for instance:
|
||
``<em>if the current URL does <strong>NOT</strong> match this
|
||
pattern</em>''. This can be used for exceptional cases, where
|
||
it is easier to match the negative pattern, or as a last
|
||
default rule.</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><h3>Notice</h3>
|
||
When using the NOT character
|
||
to negate a pattern you cannot have grouped wildcard
|
||
parts in the pattern. This is impossible because when the
|
||
pattern does NOT match, there are no contents for the
|
||
groups. In consequence, if negated patterns are used, you
|
||
cannot use <code>$N</code> in the substitution
|
||
string!
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<p><a id="rhs" name="rhs"><em>Substitution</em></a> of a
|
||
rewriting rule is the string which is substituted for (or
|
||
replaces) the original URL for which <em>Pattern</em>
|
||
matched. Beside plain text you can use</p>
|
||
|
||
<ol>
|
||
<li>back-references <code>$N</code> to the RewriteRule
|
||
pattern</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>back-references <code>%N</code> to the last matched
|
||
RewriteCond pattern</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>server-variables as in rule condition test-strings
|
||
(<code>%{VARNAME}</code>)</li>
|
||
|
||
<li><a href="#mapfunc">mapping-function</a> calls
|
||
(<code>${mapname:key|default}</code>)</li>
|
||
</ol>
|
||
<p>Back-references are <code>$</code><strong>N</strong>
|
||
(<strong>N</strong>=0..9) identifiers which will be replaced
|
||
by the contents of the <strong>N</strong>th group of the
|
||
matched <em>Pattern</em>. The server-variables are the same
|
||
as for the <em>TestString</em> of a <code>RewriteCond</code>
|
||
directive. The mapping-functions come from the
|
||
<code>RewriteMap</code> directive and are explained there.
|
||
These three types of variables are expanded in the order of
|
||
the above list. </p>
|
||
|
||
<p>As already mentioned above, all the rewriting rules are
|
||
applied to the <em>Substitution</em> (in the order of
|
||
definition in the config file). The URL is <strong>completely
|
||
replaced</strong> by the <em>Substitution</em> and the
|
||
rewriting process goes on until there are no more rules
|
||
unless explicitly terminated by a
|
||
<code><strong>L</strong></code> flag - see below.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>There is a special substitution string named
|
||
'<code>-</code>' which means: <strong>NO
|
||
substitution</strong>! Sounds silly? No, it is useful to
|
||
provide rewriting rules which <strong>only</strong> match
|
||
some URLs but do no substitution, <em>e.g.</em>, in
|
||
conjunction with the <strong>C</strong> (chain) flag to be
|
||
able to have more than one pattern to be applied before a
|
||
substitution occurs.</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>One more note: You can even create URLs in the
|
||
substitution string containing a query string part. Just use
|
||
a question mark inside the substitution string to indicate
|
||
that the following stuff should be re-injected into the
|
||
QUERY_STRING. When you want to erase an existing query
|
||
string, end the substitution string with just the question
|
||
mark.</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><h3>Note</h3>
|
||
There is a special feature:
|
||
When you prefix a substitution field with
|
||
<code>http://</code><em>thishost</em>[<em>:thisport</em>]
|
||
then <strong>mod_rewrite</strong> automatically strips it
|
||
out. This auto-reduction on implicit external redirect
|
||
URLs is a useful and important feature when used in
|
||
combination with a mapping-function which generates the
|
||
hostname part. Have a look at the first example in the
|
||
example section below to understand this.
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><h3>Remember</h3>
|
||
An unconditional external
|
||
redirect to your own server will not work with the prefix
|
||
<code>http://thishost</code> because of this feature. To
|
||
achieve such a self-redirect, you have to use the
|
||
<strong>R</strong>-flag (see below).
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<p>Additionally you can set special flags for
|
||
<em>Substitution</em> by appending</p>
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<strong><code>[</code><em>flags</em><code>]</code></strong>
|
||
</p>
|
||
<p>
|
||
as the third argument to the <code>RewriteRule</code>
|
||
directive. <em>Flags</em> is a comma-separated list of the
|
||
following flags: </p>
|
||
|
||
<ul>
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>redirect|R</code>
|
||
[=<em>code</em>]</strong>' (force <a id="redirect" name="redirect"><strong>r</strong>edirect</a>)<br />
|
||
Prefix <em>Substitution</em> with
|
||
<code>http://thishost[:thisport]/</code> (which makes the
|
||
new URL a URI) to force a external redirection. If no
|
||
<em>code</em> is given a HTTP response of 302 (MOVED
|
||
TEMPORARILY) is used. If you want to use other response
|
||
codes in the range 300-400 just specify them as a number
|
||
or use one of the following symbolic names:
|
||
<code>temp</code> (default), <code>permanent</code>,
|
||
<code>seeother</code>. Use it for rules which should
|
||
canonicalize the URL and give it back to the client,
|
||
<em>e.g.</em>, translate ``<code>/~</code>'' into
|
||
``<code>/u/</code>'' or always append a slash to
|
||
<code>/u/</code><em>user</em>, etc.<br />
|
||
|
||
|
||
<p><strong>Note:</strong> When you use this flag, make
|
||
sure that the substitution field is a valid URL! If not,
|
||
you are redirecting to an invalid location! And remember
|
||
that this flag itself only prefixes the URL with
|
||
<code>http://thishost[:thisport]/</code>, rewriting
|
||
continues. Usually you also want to stop and do the
|
||
redirection immediately. To stop the rewriting you also
|
||
have to provide the 'L' flag.</p>
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong><code>forbidden|F</code></strong>' (force URL
|
||
to be <strong>f</strong>orbidden)<br />
|
||
This forces the current URL to be forbidden,
|
||
<em>i.e.</em>, it immediately sends back a HTTP response of
|
||
403 (FORBIDDEN). Use this flag in conjunction with
|
||
appropriate RewriteConds to conditionally block some
|
||
URLs.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong><code>gone|G</code></strong>' (force URL to be
|
||
<strong>g</strong>one)<br />
|
||
This forces the current URL to be gone, <em>i.e.</em>, it
|
||
immediately sends back a HTTP response of 410 (GONE). Use
|
||
this flag to mark pages which no longer exist as gone.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>proxy|P</code></strong>' (force
|
||
<strong>p</strong>roxy)<br />
|
||
This flag forces the substitution part to be internally
|
||
forced as a proxy request and immediately (<em>i.e.</em>,
|
||
rewriting rule processing stops here) put through the <a href="mod_proxy.html">proxy module</a>. You have to make
|
||
sure that the substitution string is a valid URI
|
||
(<em>e.g.</em>, typically starting with
|
||
<code>http://</code><em>hostname</em>) which can be
|
||
handled by the Apache proxy module. If not you get an
|
||
error from the proxy module. Use this flag to achieve a
|
||
more powerful implementation of the <a href="mod_proxy.html#proxypass">ProxyPass</a> directive,
|
||
to map some remote stuff into the namespace of the local
|
||
server.
|
||
|
||
<p>Notice: To use this functionality make sure you have
|
||
the proxy module compiled into your Apache server
|
||
program. If you don't know please check whether
|
||
<code>mod_proxy.c</code> is part of the ``<code>httpd
|
||
-l</code>'' output. If yes, this functionality is
|
||
available to mod_rewrite. If not, then you first have to
|
||
rebuild the ``<code>httpd</code>'' program with mod_proxy
|
||
enabled.</p>
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong><code>last|L</code></strong>'
|
||
(<strong>l</strong>ast rule)<br />
|
||
Stop the rewriting process here and don't apply any more
|
||
rewriting rules. This corresponds to the Perl
|
||
<code>last</code> command or the <code>break</code> command
|
||
from the C language. Use this flag to prevent the currently
|
||
rewritten URL from being rewritten further by following
|
||
rules. For example, use it to rewrite the root-path URL
|
||
('<code>/</code>') to a real one, <em>e.g.</em>,
|
||
'<code>/e/www/</code>'.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong><code>next|N</code></strong>'
|
||
(<strong>n</strong>ext round)<br />
|
||
Re-run the rewriting process (starting again with the
|
||
first rewriting rule). Here the URL to match is again not
|
||
the original URL but the URL from the last rewriting rule.
|
||
This corresponds to the Perl <code>next</code> command or
|
||
the <code>continue</code> command from the C language. Use
|
||
this flag to restart the rewriting process, <em>i.e.</em>,
|
||
to immediately go to the top of the loop.<br />
|
||
<strong>But be careful not to create an infinite
|
||
loop!</strong></li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong><code>chain|C</code></strong>'
|
||
(<strong>c</strong>hained with next rule)<br />
|
||
This flag chains the current rule with the next rule
|
||
(which itself can be chained with the following rule,
|
||
<em>etc.</em>). This has the following effect: if a rule
|
||
matches, then processing continues as usual, <em>i.e.</em>,
|
||
the flag has no effect. If the rule does
|
||
<strong>not</strong> match, then all following chained
|
||
rules are skipped. For instance, use it to remove the
|
||
``<code>.www</code>'' part inside a per-directory rule set
|
||
when you let an external redirect happen (where the
|
||
``<code>.www</code>'' part should not to occur!).</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>type|T</code></strong>=<em>MIME-type</em>'
|
||
(force MIME <strong>t</strong>ype)<br />
|
||
Force the MIME-type of the target file to be
|
||
<em>MIME-type</em>. For instance, this can be used to
|
||
setup the content-type based on some conditions.
|
||
For example, the following snippet allows <code>.php</code> files to
|
||
be <em>displayed</em> by <code>mod_php</code> if they are called with
|
||
the <code>.phps</code> extension:
|
||
<div class="example"><p><code>
|
||
RewriteRule ^(.+\.php)s$ $1 [T=application/x-httpd-php-source]
|
||
</code></p></div>
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>handler|H</code></strong>=<em>Content-handler</em>'
|
||
(force Content <strong>h</strong>andler)<br />
|
||
Force the Content-handler of the target file to be
|
||
<em>Content-handler</em>. For instance, this can be used to
|
||
simulate the <code>mod_alias</code> directive
|
||
<code>ScriptAlias</code> which internally forces all files
|
||
inside the mapped directory to have a handler of
|
||
``<code>cgi-script</code>''.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>nosubreq|NS</code></strong>' (used only if
|
||
<strong>n</strong>o internal
|
||
<strong>s</strong>ub-request)<br />
|
||
This flag forces the rewriting engine to skip a
|
||
rewriting rule if the current request is an internal
|
||
sub-request. For instance, sub-requests occur internally
|
||
in Apache when <code>mod_include</code> tries to find out
|
||
information about possible directory default files
|
||
(<code>index.xxx</code>). On sub-requests it is not
|
||
always useful and even sometimes causes a failure to if
|
||
the complete set of rules are applied. Use this flag to
|
||
exclude some rules.<br />
|
||
|
||
|
||
<p>Use the following rule for your decision: whenever you
|
||
prefix some URLs with CGI-scripts to force them to be
|
||
processed by the CGI-script, the chance is high that you
|
||
will run into problems (or even overhead) on
|
||
sub-requests. In these cases, use this flag.</p>
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong><code>nocase|NC</code></strong>'
|
||
(<strong>n</strong>o <strong>c</strong>ase)<br />
|
||
This makes the <em>Pattern</em> case-insensitive,
|
||
<em>i.e.</em>, there is no difference between 'A-Z' and
|
||
'a-z' when <em>Pattern</em> is matched against the current
|
||
URL.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong><code>qsappend|QSA</code></strong>'
|
||
(<strong>q</strong>uery <strong>s</strong>tring
|
||
<strong>a</strong>ppend)<br />
|
||
This flag forces the rewriting engine to append a query
|
||
string part in the substitution string to the existing one
|
||
instead of replacing it. Use this when you want to add more
|
||
data to the query string via a rewrite rule.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>noescape|NE</code></strong>'
|
||
(<strong>n</strong>o URI <strong>e</strong>scaping of
|
||
output)<br />
|
||
This flag keeps mod_rewrite from applying the usual URI
|
||
escaping rules to the result of a rewrite. Ordinarily,
|
||
special characters (such as '%', '$', ';', and so on)
|
||
will be escaped into their hexcode equivalents ('%25',
|
||
'%24', and '%3B', respectively); this flag prevents this
|
||
from being done. This allows percent symbols to appear in
|
||
the output, as in
|
||
<div class="example"><p><code>
|
||
RewriteRule /foo/(.*) /bar?arg=P1\%3d$1 [R,NE]
|
||
</code></p></div>
|
||
|
||
which would turn '<code>/foo/zed</code>' into a safe
|
||
request for '<code>/bar?arg=P1=zed</code>'.
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>passthrough|PT</code></strong>'
|
||
(<strong>p</strong>ass <strong>t</strong>hrough to next
|
||
handler)<br />
|
||
This flag forces the rewriting engine to set the
|
||
<code>uri</code> field of the internal
|
||
<code>request_rec</code> structure to the value of the
|
||
<code>filename</code> field. This flag is just a hack to
|
||
be able to post-process the output of
|
||
<code>RewriteRule</code> directives by
|
||
<code>Alias</code>, <code>ScriptAlias</code>,
|
||
<code>Redirect</code>, <em>etc.</em> directives from
|
||
other URI-to-filename translators. A trivial example to
|
||
show the semantics: If you want to rewrite
|
||
<code>/abc</code> to <code>/def</code> via the rewriting
|
||
engine of <code>mod_rewrite</code> and then
|
||
<code>/def</code> to <code>/ghi</code> with
|
||
<code>mod_alias</code>:
|
||
<div class="example"><p><code>
|
||
RewriteRule ^/abc(.*) /def$1 [PT]<br />
|
||
Alias /def /ghi
|
||
</code></p></div>
|
||
If you omit the <code>PT</code> flag then
|
||
<code>mod_rewrite</code> will do its job fine,
|
||
<em>i.e.</em>, it rewrites <code>uri=/abc/...</code> to
|
||
<code>filename=/def/...</code> as a full API-compliant
|
||
URI-to-filename translator should do. Then
|
||
<code>mod_alias</code> comes and tries to do a
|
||
URI-to-filename transition which will not work.
|
||
|
||
<p>Note: <strong>You have to use this flag if you want to
|
||
intermix directives of different modules which contain
|
||
URL-to-filename translators</strong>. The typical example
|
||
is the use of <code>mod_alias</code> and
|
||
<code>mod_rewrite</code>..</p>
|
||
</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>'<strong><code>skip|S</code></strong>=<em>num</em>'
|
||
(<strong>s</strong>kip next rule(s))<br />
|
||
This flag forces the rewriting engine to skip the next
|
||
<em>num</em> rules in sequence when the current rule
|
||
matches. Use this to make pseudo if-then-else constructs:
|
||
The last rule of the then-clause becomes
|
||
<code>skip=N</code> where N is the number of rules in the
|
||
else-clause. (This is <strong>not</strong> the same as the
|
||
'chain|C' flag!)</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>env|E=</code></strong><em>VAR</em>:<em>VAL</em>'
|
||
(set <strong>e</strong>nvironment variable)<br />
|
||
This forces an environment variable named <em>VAR</em> to
|
||
be set to the value <em>VAL</em>, where <em>VAL</em> can
|
||
contain regexp backreferences <code>$N</code> and
|
||
<code>%N</code> which will be expanded. You can use this
|
||
flag more than once to set more than one variable. The
|
||
variables can be later dereferenced in many situations, but
|
||
usually from within XSSI (via <code><!--#echo
|
||
var="VAR"--></code>) or CGI (<em>e.g.</em>
|
||
<code>$ENV{'VAR'}</code>). Additionally you can dereference
|
||
it in a following RewriteCond pattern via
|
||
<code>%{ENV:VAR}</code>. Use this to strip but remember
|
||
information from URLs.</li>
|
||
|
||
<li>
|
||
'<strong><code>cookie|CO=</code></strong><em>NAME</em>:<em>VAL</em>:<em>domain</em>[:<em>lifetime</em>[:<em>path</em>]]'
|
||
(set <strong>co</strong>okie)<br />
|
||
This sets a cookie on the client's browser. The cookie's name
|
||
is specified by <em>NAME</em> and the value is
|
||
<em>VAL</em>. The <em>domain</em> field is the domain of the
|
||
cookie, such as '.apache.org',the optional <em>lifetime</em>
|
||
is the lifetime of the cookie in minutes, and the optional
|
||
<em>path</em> is the path of the cookie</li>
|
||
|
||
</ul>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><h3>Note</h3> Never forget that <em>Pattern</em> is
|
||
applied to a complete URL in per-server configuration
|
||
files. <strong>But in per-directory configuration files, the
|
||
per-directory prefix (which always is the same for a specific
|
||
directory!) is automatically <em>removed</em> for the pattern matching
|
||
and automatically <em>added</em> after the substitution has been
|
||
done.</strong> This feature is essential for many sorts of rewriting,
|
||
because without this prefix stripping you have to match the parent
|
||
directory which is not always possible.
|
||
|
||
<p>There is one exception: If a substitution string
|
||
starts with ``<code>http://</code>'' then the directory
|
||
prefix will <strong>not</strong> be added and an
|
||
external redirect or proxy throughput (if flag
|
||
<strong>P</strong> is used!) is forced!</p>
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><h3>Note</h3>
|
||
To enable the rewriting engine
|
||
for per-directory configuration files you need to set
|
||
``<code>RewriteEngine On</code>'' in these files
|
||
<strong>and</strong> ``<code>Options
|
||
FollowSymLinks</code>'' must be enabled. If your
|
||
administrator has disabled override of
|
||
<code>FollowSymLinks</code> for a user's directory, then
|
||
you cannot use the rewriting engine. This restriction is
|
||
needed for security reasons.
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<p>Here are all possible substitution combinations and their
|
||
meanings:</p>
|
||
|
||
<p><strong>Inside per-server configuration
|
||
(<code>httpd.conf</code>)<br />
|
||
for request ``<code>GET
|
||
/somepath/pathinfo</code>'':</strong><br />
|
||
</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><pre>
|
||
<strong>Given Rule</strong> <strong>Resulting Substitution</strong>
|
||
---------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
|
||
^/somepath(.*) otherpath$1 not supported, because invalid!
|
||
|
||
^/somepath(.*) otherpath$1 [R] not supported, because invalid!
|
||
|
||
^/somepath(.*) otherpath$1 [P] not supported, because invalid!
|
||
---------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
|
||
^/somepath(.*) /otherpath$1 /otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
|
||
^/somepath(.*) /otherpath$1 [R] http://thishost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via external redirection
|
||
|
||
^/somepath(.*) /otherpath$1 [P] not supported, because silly!
|
||
---------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
|
||
^/somepath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 /otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
|
||
^/somepath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 [R] http://thishost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via external redirection
|
||
|
||
^/somepath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 [P] not supported, because silly!
|
||
---------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
|
||
^/somepath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via external redirection
|
||
|
||
^/somepath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 [R] http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via external redirection
|
||
(the [R] flag is redundant)
|
||
|
||
^/somepath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 [P] http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via internal proxy
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
<p><strong>Inside per-directory configuration for
|
||
<code>/somepath</code><br />
|
||
(<em>i.e.</em>, file <code>.htaccess</code> in dir
|
||
<code>/physical/path/to/somepath</code> containing
|
||
<code>RewriteBase /somepath</code>)<br />
|
||
for request ``<code>GET
|
||
/somepath/localpath/pathinfo</code>'':</strong><br />
|
||
</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="note"><pre>
|
||
<strong>Given Rule</strong> <strong>Resulting Substitution</strong>
|
||
---------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
|
||
^localpath(.*) otherpath$1 /somepath/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
|
||
^localpath(.*) otherpath$1 [R] http://thishost/somepath/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via external redirection
|
||
|
||
^localpath(.*) otherpath$1 [P] not supported, because silly!
|
||
---------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
|
||
^localpath(.*) /otherpath$1 /otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
|
||
^localpath(.*) /otherpath$1 [R] http://thishost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via external redirection
|
||
|
||
^localpath(.*) /otherpath$1 [P] not supported, because silly!
|
||
---------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
|
||
^localpath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 /otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
|
||
^localpath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 [R] http://thishost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via external redirection
|
||
|
||
^localpath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 [P] not supported, because silly!
|
||
---------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
|
||
^localpath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via external redirection
|
||
|
||
^localpath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 [R] http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via external redirection
|
||
(the [R] flag is redundant)
|
||
|
||
^localpath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 [P] http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo
|
||
via internal proxy
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
<p><strong>Example:</strong></p>
|
||
|
||
<p>We want to rewrite URLs of the form </p>
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<code>/</code> <em>Language</em> <code>/~</code>
|
||
<em>Realname</em> <code>/.../</code> <em>File</em>
|
||
</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>into </p>
|
||
|
||
<p class="indent">
|
||
<code>/u/</code> <em>Username</em> <code>/.../</code>
|
||
<em>File</em> <code>.</code> <em>Language</em>
|
||
</p>
|
||
|
||
<p>We take the rewrite mapfile from above and save it under
|
||
<code>/path/to/file/map.txt</code>. Then we only have to
|
||
add the following lines to the Apache server configuration
|
||
file:</p>
|
||
|
||
<div class="example"><pre>
|
||
RewriteLog /path/to/file/rewrite.log
|
||
RewriteMap real-to-user txt:/path/to/file/map.txt
|
||
RewriteRule ^/([^/]+)/~([^/]+)/(.*)$ /u/${real-to-user:$2|nobody}/$3.$1
|
||
</pre></div>
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="bottomlang">
|
||
<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/mod/mod_rewrite.html" title="English"> en </a></p>
|
||
</div><div id="footer">
|
||
<p class="apache">Copyright 1999-2004 The Apache Software Foundation.<br />Licensed under the <a href="http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0">Apache License, Version 2.0</a>.</p>
|
||
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