Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4
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This document supplements the reference documentation. It describes how to use the RewriteRule's [P] flag to proxy content to another server. A number of recipes are provided that describe common scenarios.
mod_rewrite provides the [P] flag, which allows URLs to be ed, via mod_proxy, to another server. Two examples are given here. In one example, a URL is ed directly to another server, and served as though it were a local URL. In the other example, we proxy missing content to a back-end server.
To simply map a URL to another server, we use the [P] flag, as follows:
RewriteEngine on RewriteBase "/products/" RewriteRule "^widget/(.*)$" "http://product.example.com/widget/$1" [P] ProxyReverse "/products/widget/" "http://product.example.com/widget/"
In the second example, we proxy the request only if we can't find the resource locally. This can be very useful when you're migrating from one server to another, and you're not sure if all the content has been migrated yet.
RewriteCond "%{REQUEST_FILENAME}" !-f RewriteCond "%{REQUEST_FILENAME}" !-d RewriteRule "^/(.*)" "http://old.example.com/$1" [P] ProxyReverse "/" "http://old.example.com/"
In each case, we add a ProxyReverse
directive to ensure that any redirects issued by the backend are correctly ed on to the client.
Consider using either ProxyMatch
whenever possible in preference to mod_rewrite.
Available Languages: fr