Mar 16 02:44
@banacan
Mar 16 02:18
But also bear in mind that 301 (permanent) redirects are cached persistently by the browser (and possibly any intermediary caches), so if there are any errors in the redirects then they will be cached. Preferably test with 302 (temporary) redirects to avoid caching issues and/or test with the browser dev tools open on the "Network" tab with "Disable Cache" checked.
Mar 16 02:16
Well, I'm assuming oldexample.org should also be pointing at the same server and the request should be of the form oldexample.org/test/detail/... (not newexample.org)? If you want to "test" these redirects at newexample.org then temporarily change the hostname in the first rule to "somethingelse.com" (so it doesn't match) AND comment out the last "generic" rule entirely (otherwise you'll get a redirect loop).
Mar 16 02:08
> if I am on the New site and I type in the browser bar newexample.org/test/detail/…
Mar 16 02:05
No, it's correct to have the "new domain" there. (Aren't all these requests that you want to redirect to the "old domain"?) That rule states that if a request comes in for the "new domain" then the next 102 rules are skipped (S flag). So, the redirects are only processed for requests that are not the "new domain", ie. the old domain (assuming you don't have any more domains, other than the "old" and "new" one?)
Mar 16 02:03
> In the first example you gave the first RewriteCond showed the new domain RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^(www\.)?newexample\.org [NC]` shouldn't it be the old domain?
Mar 15 19:02
@banacan "I need two versions of each RewriteRule" - You only need one rule to handle both URLs. The RewriteRule pattern is a regular expression (regex), so you can just make the index.php/ part optional. eg. RewriteRule ^(index\.php/)?test/detail/....$
Mar 15 19:02
@banacan "I also notice that you do not have the initial / in the path." - Yes, that is correct. In .htaccess, the URL-path that the RewriteRule pattern matches against does not start with a slash. If you include the slash prefix then the rule will not match and it won't do anything. (This is different to when mod_rewrite is used in a server or virtualhost context - in this case the URL-path that is matched is root-relative, including the slash prefix!)
Mar 15 19:02
@banacan Sorry, yes, the other RewriteRule directives in that block should really have $ at the end of the RewriteRule pattern. I've updated my answer. (Although it would work without.) There's obviously no $ after ^test/ in the generic rule, or on the condition that checks the hostname, ie. ^(www\.)?oldexample\.org (to allow for fully qualified domains that end in a dot).
 
Feb 14, 2023 22:37
To do that is the same principle, but just more complex. If you have many URLs (for your next project) look at front-controller pattern and "routers". The router script looks at the URL and then decides how it should be handled. The code in .htaccess is then very minimal, but all the routing logic is in your server-side script (eg. PHP). Won't work on a "static" site.
Feb 14, 2023 22:34
(Please use backticks on URLs - they are truncated in the chat, unless I hover)
Feb 14, 2023 22:32
> So lets say I wanted to change this url: footmastercasters.com/sub/…
> To this: footmastercasters.com/…
Feb 14, 2023 22:31
You should really avoid using "URLs" with ./ (dot indicating a CWD) - that is a filesystem concept, not a URL. (The dot ultimately ends up being resolved away, so it still "works".)
Feb 14, 2023 22:29
The problem with relative URLs is that if you are suddenly rewriting from a different path depth (eg. you decide to change the URL of a page from /foo to /bar/foo) then all your links break (CSS, JS, images, etc.)
Feb 14, 2023 22:29
You should avoid using relative URLs (particularly to your static assets). Use root-relative (starting with a slash) or absolute (with scheme + hostname). Although abs URLs are going to problematic if you are writing these links manually and could make it hard to transfer from development to production.
Feb 14, 2023 22:25
>
I've seen people update using `href="http://example.com/something/"` on the production site instead of local directory such as "./" - is this the correct practice?
Feb 14, 2023 22:21
MultiViews is best avoided to be honest. It can result in unexpected conflicts.
Feb 14, 2023 22:20
That depends on the system. On Apache, an internal rewrite using mod_rewrite (as outlined in my answer). When I mentioned "something"... I'm guessing that if you have not implemented this on "AWS Amplify" then maybe it does something "automatically"? Or maybe extensionless URLs "just work" anyway? (On Apache you can make extensionless URLs "just work" by using MultiViews - but then every file is accessible by just the extensionless URL, including all your assets etc.)
Feb 14, 2023 22:16
Yes, that is not correct. I'm seeing `/about.html` (for example) in the link. When I "copy the URL" (right mouse option) I'm copying `/about.html` - which is the URL I would potentially "share". And when I click the link I'm 301 redirected to `/about` (this is a second HTTP request). There must be something that then routes the request from `/about` back to `/about.html`.
Feb 14, 2023 22:16
> Here is an example of a site I did through an amplify app that changes the target address with JSON.
Feb 14, 2023 22:10
Basically yes. You need to link to your canonical URLs in your HTML source. In your example you are just removing the .html extension, but you could have a URL /thankyou that maps to the "file" /index.php. In fact, all URLs could map to the same file. And index.php determines the content to serve (a front-controller pattern) based on the URL being requested.
Feb 14, 2023 22:03
But does that update the HTML source? (I don't think it does - I don't see how it could? What you posted is simply a 301 redirect.) It will work the same on Apache. It will look as if it "works" at a casual glance. But if you don't remove the .html extension in the source then users can still "see" the .html URL, everytime a user clicks a link they will be externally redirected. Google will give warnings in GSC about "redirecting url" etc. etc.
Feb 14, 2023 22:00
> When I've done it in the past on amplify with the JSON example I've never had to remove the .HTML extension from the hrefs. Do you know why that is?
Feb 14, 2023 20:17
@user I've updated my answer with more explanation and an external redirect.
Feb 14, 2023 20:17
@user You can implement an external 301 redirect (as well) in .htaccess from /thankyou.html to /thankyou/ (or /thankyou), but you must first actually change the URLs in the underlying HTML source code. You then implement a "rewrite" to internally rewrite the URL back again.
Feb 14, 2023 20:17
@user So, what URL are you requesting? .htaccess does not actually "change" the URLs, which sounds as if you are perhaps expecting? If you want the URL to look like /thankyou/ (note the trailing slash) then you need to be linking to href="/thankyou/" in your HTML source.
 
Jan 10, 2023 16:54
If Nginx is being used as a front-end proxy then is this also managing .php requests? (Although you stated that these requests were returning 301 then 410 - so that does not follow.)
Jan 10, 2023 16:52
The RedirectPermanent directive you have is not doing anything. This directive matches the URL-path only.
Jan 10, 2023 16:51
To confirm, you stated you are now getting a 404 (not a 410)? And you were definitely getting a 410 before? "The 301 is now manage by the server (Plesk)." - What does that mean? What have you changed? If Plesk is managing the HTTP to HTTPS redirect outside of .htaccess then that is likely happening earlier in teh request. The rules you've posted here are not the rules as posted in my answer?
Jan 10, 2023 14:20
@Arnaud OK, in that case, if your original rules were working as stated (ie. 301 followed by 410) then the revised rules in my answer should also "work". Are your rules exactly as I've stated above? And you have no other rules? (I'm now wondering why you used THE_REQUEST in your original rules - that would only have been necessary if you have a front-controller pattern or the URL is not as stated in the question?)
Jan 10, 2023 14:20
@Arnaud "Nginx"?! .htaccess is an Apache config file and won't work on Nginx! (How was this "working" previously?)
Jan 10, 2023 14:20
@Arnaud You're welcome. If this answered your question then please mark it "accepted" (grey/green checkmark next to my answer above on the left below the voting arrows) to help other readers and remove the question from the unanswered question queue (you also get some "rep" for doing this). Please also consider upvoting answers you find helpful and to show gratitude. Thanks, much appreciated :)
Jan 10, 2023 14:20
@Arnaud The rules above would already do that. They don't check the requested scheme (HTTP or HTTPS) so they naturally block both HTTP and HTTPS requests.
 

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Another non-programming question about SEO/website development that is better suited to the Webmasters stack... stackoverflow.com/questions/74344743/…
 

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Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue The order of the rules is important. That rule (for the contact form) would need to go before your "catch-all" search rule. You are also missing the L flag from that rule. And ^contact?$ should probably be ^contact$. (The ? is a special regex character that makes the preceding token optional, so that would have matched contac and contact.)
Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue It's probably easier to focus on the characters you don't want to match, rather than the characters you do. I've updated my answer. (UPDATE#4)
Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue I've updated my answer. (I've just noticed that you had previously added an "EN DASH" to the regex - which I had copied into my answer - but this wasn't present in your original rule?)
Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue Add & to the character class - this char carries no special meaning in the regex. However, you'll likely need to add the B flag to that rule so the & is URL-encoded in the query string and not seen as a URL parameter delimiter. I'll update my answer.
Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue Ah OK, I did not expect you to be requesting index.php directly. I've updated my answer.
Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue "What other directives do you have?" - I'm curious, because unless you do have other rules (that rewrites the request to index.php) then this rule by itself should not rewrite the "home page". Unless by "home page" you mean you are requesting index.php directly?
Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue Ah, it's likely now conflicting with other rules/rewrites. eg. If you are rewriting requests to a front-controller. I've updated my answer.
Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue The literal dot won't redirect the homepage. What other directives do you have?
Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue That's great. If this answered your question then please mark it as "accepted" by clicking the tick/checkmark next to the answer on the left below the voting arrows (to help other users and remove the question from the unanswered question queue). You can also upvote answers you find helpful. Thanks, much appreciated. :)
Oct 8, 2022 14:20
@ZamaniVogue That regex already includes the hyphen -, but excludes : (colon) and . (dot). You need to modify the regex character class to include those additional characters. eg. [a-zA-Z0-9:.\s-]. But what characters do you need to allow? Why is the second rule matching anything?
 
Feb 2, 2022 10:03
Not to mention an unnecessary loop of the rewrite engine, since ^providers also matches providers.php. (Which could also result in a rewrite-loop, if you later change these rules.)
Feb 2, 2022 10:02
As well as changing the order (or instead of) you should really be using end-of-string anchors on the initial rules, otherwise you are matching /providers<anything> (potentially creating a lot of duplicate content - which opens you up to abuse).
 
Aug 9, 2021 09:51
@Sabito錆兎 Ah ha! Thanks! :)
 
Feb 1, 2021 17:23
Ok, it really comes back to the original question... what do you actually want to happen when you request the URL /api/v1/events? What is the required end-point for this request? It seems that passing the trailing URL-path to api.php as path-info is not actually what you want to do. (?) You need to find out how this is seemingly working OK on localhost.
Feb 1, 2021 17:14
So, if you request /myprojectfolder/routes/api.php/v1/events directly it would also "work"?