In my app, I have 3 dockers:
an entry point which is an httpd container
first api
second api
I need to redirect all request on the entry point with this pattern: /api1/... to the first api and /api2/... to the second api.
To do that I try to put this .htaccess on the entry point but it doesn't work have you got an idea ? Maybe I don't use the goods things.
RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule ^/api1/(.*)$ api1_container/$1 [R=301,L]
RewriteRule ^/api2/(.*)$ api2_container/$1 [R=301,L]
I still got 404 not found on localhost:8080/api1 and localhost:8080/api2
Thanks for your help.
Alexis
Related
I have this line of .htaccess
This line is used to get images from another server.
RewriteRule ^resources/fabricantes(.*)$ http://mysecondserver.com/arq/pictures/fab$1
than, if I have the url: http://myserver.com/resources/fabricantes/fab_1.jpg
this image will be get from: http://mysecondserver.com/arq/pictures/fab/fab_1.jpg
The Problem:
In some cases, the image doesn't exists on mysecondserver.com, how can I redirect to a "image unavailable" image in this cases?
First think you need to understand that this rule can only work from mysecondserver.com host not from server.com.
On mysecondserver.com place this .htaccess in /arq/pictures/.htaccess:
RewriteEngine On
RewriteBase /arq/pictures/
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteRule ^ no-image.jpg [L]
On mysecondserver.com, you would have .htaccess checking for -f status of the REQUEST_FILENAME. It could send the user back to the first server, if necessary. The alternative is to explicitly list all known failures back on your first server, which is a lot of work for you (even if you have a complete list). There's no way for the first server to know if a file actually exists on the second server.
Several companies are sharing resources (wiki, forum, shops...), now they like to use ONE server certificate for this.
The url looks as following:
company1.domain1.com or www.company1.domain1.com
company2.domain2.com or www.company2.domain2.com
company3.domain3.com or www.company3.domain3.com
New pointing to the same newdomain.com/company1 on the hosting.
What I want to achieve at the end is:
newdomain.com/company1
newdomain.com/company2
newdomain.com/company3
In the browser when somebody type www.company2.domain2.com in the URL you should see http://newdomain.com/company2 (without www)
I need two examples. One is exactly this thing I described. Second is the same thing, but at the end in URL I want see https://newdomain.com/company2 (without www)
In the htaccess file in your domain1.com, domain2.com, domain3.com, etc, document root, add:
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^(www\.)?([^.]+)\.[^.]+\.com$ [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://newdomain.com/%2/$1 [L,R=301]
This will redirect http://www.mycompany.somedomain.com/path/to/file.txt to http://newdomain.com/mycompany/path/to/file.txt
I realize this question has been asked many times but I have been trying for a while now and cannot get any of the previously posted solutions to work for me.
I have a webapp app hosted on my site at: www.example.com/app/
At the heart of the app is an index.php file that resides in www.example.com/app/www/
What I need is for all requests on the site to be forwarded to this /www/ subdirectory.
For example, www.example.com/app/ will forward to www.example.com/app/www/
and www.example.com/app/view/ will forward to www.example.com/app/www/view/
Thank you for any help that anyone can offer on this matter. It's been driving me crazy.
Adding this to your htaccess file in your document root (the directory that "app" is in) doesn't work?
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} !^/app/www/
RewriteRule ^app/(.*)$ /app/www/$1 [L]
we moved our joomla site and rebuilt. in the process a link got moved that we need to be as it was before.
before:
www.mysite.org/kindergym
now it lives here:
www.mysite.org/education/kindergym
it would seem that it would be easy to go into com_redirect and do this. however, it only works for the following
mysite.org/kindergym without the www
with the www attached writing the old url returns a 404 error page, not a redirect.
i tried to make a separate redirect with the www too and it wouldnt let me. i tried a separate module with no success and have played around with the .htaccess file (although i am not very knowledgeable about htaccess).
could someone explain the reason why this would be an issue? the difference between the two. i tried calling my host and they were less than helpful and actually told me what i wanted to do couldnt be done LOL.
thanks.
I take it the solution you have would work if you redirect the entire mysite.org to www.mysite.org?
If so, create a .htaccess file in the website root. Put the following inside it:
########## Begin - Redirecting non-www request to www
#
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^mysite.org [NC]
RewriteRule (.*) http://www.mysite.org/$1 [L,R=301]
#
########## End - Redirecting non-www request to www
You also need to make sure mod_rewrite is enabled on the apache-server, but I think most providers support that.
I suggest you post your full .htaccess here. However I think all you need is this rule:
RewriteRule ^(?!education/).*)$ education/$1 [L,NC]
The other two answers are good! but better implement 301 redirect in httpd.conf since it's compiled once on server restart. The same code in .htccess is interpreted for each and every HTTP request!
Here's the scenario, I have a website that used to be a static HTML site and WordPress blog using a subdomain (http://blog.domain.com).
I recently combined everything into a single WordPress installation. To maintain old links I had to rewrite requests like "http://blog.domain.com/index.php/2010/10/16/post-name" to "http://domain.com/index.php/2010/10/16/post-name". My problem is that when trying to visit just "http://blog.domain.com", I get redirected to "http://domain.com" when I want it to go to "http://domain.com/index.php/blog".
So, if a user requests "http://blog.domain.com" (by itself, with or without slash), I want it to go to "http://domain.com/index.php/blog". If they request an old URL of "http://blog.domain.com/some-link-to-a-post", I want it to redirect to "http://domain.com/some-link-to-a-post". In other words, if it's a URL to an actual post, I just want to strip the "blog" subdomain. If it's the old link to the main blog page, I want to remove the "blog" subdomain and append "/index.php/blog"
http://blog.domain.com/ -> http://domain.com/index.php/blog
http://blog.domain.com/index.php/2010/10/16/post-title -> http://domain.com/index.php/2010/10/16/post-title
Hopefully that's clear. I'm not an htaccess expert, so hopefully someone can help me out here. Thanks in advance!
Using the [L] command at the end of a rewrite will tell htaccess that this is the last rule it should match. If you put a rule to match your first condition at the top and the other rewrite rule you said you had already created after it, you should get your expected result.
Try this:
RewriteRule ^blog.domain.com(/?)$ domain.com/index.php/blog [L]
# Your other rewrite here #
I couldn't get that solution to work. However, I used the following:
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^blog\.domain\.com$ [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://domain.com/index.php/blog/$1 [R=301,L]
That ends up in a URL like http://domain.com/index.php/blog/index.php/2010/06/04/post-title, but Wordpress is smart enough to fix it.