A map function allows using no id in the url at all, while still using the id in the rewritten url to do the database lookup.
http://www.domain.com/another-one
maps to
http://www.domain.com/listing.php?company_id=3423
Here is how I use map text files, which I generate from a database query. I believe mod_rewrite also does mapping to a database directly, of which I'm unfamiliar (maybe someone can provide that answer). I use Helicon Tech's isapi_rewrite v3, which works like mod_rewrite, so this should work for you.
Sample map file named map_company.txt
some-company 12
another-one 3423
freds-fill-dirt-and-croissants 44
The rewrite rules:
RewriteMap map_company txt:map_company.txt [NC]
RewriteCond ${map_company:$1|NOT_FOUND} !NOT_FOUND
RewriteRule ^/(.*) /listing.php?company_id=${map_company:$1} [NC,QSA,L]
RewriteMap assigns the map_company.txt text file to a variable named map_company (named the same just to be consistent).
RewriteRule is doing the work. It captures everything after the slash into $1
, then rewrites it to your listing.php url. The ${map_company:$1}
is looking up the url in the map file, and returning the id.
RewriteCond is just doing a double-check to see if the listing is there. The $1 is coming from the RewriteRule url, the NOT_FOUND is a default value if not found, and the condition is if it's not-NOT_FOUND (a little tangled - but it's just checking if it's in the file). If it's in the file, the RewriteRule will be run. If it's not in the file, it skips the RewriteRule, and falls through to more rules (perhaps to a page-not-found or some other default).