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I'm having a controller named : main_controller all the links in my app refers to it with url like : /main_controller/...

Now i want to insert some SEO in all this and change the url to a more seo one like /seo_name_for_controller/...

Instead of doing a full manual search & replace for all occurences which may be source of errors, I wish i could do this using htaccess with something like :

RewriteRule ^/main_controller/(.*)$ /seo_name_for_controller/$1 [L,R=301]

Then using routes.php to finish the process like :

$route['seo_name_for_controller/(:any)'] = "main_controller/$1";

Is it possible or will it cause an infinite loop ? does someone have a code example for this ?

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    The $route declaration alone should be enough for it to work - no need to add things to the .htaccessfile.
    – Mudshark
    Sep 6, 2012 at 8:15

2 Answers 2

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It shouldn't cause a problem. The CI Route is not technically redirecting, it is just using the URI pattern to call a specific controller. This should work.

Have you tried it to see what happens though? Your question suggests no trial.

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thanx for your reply, i followed your advice and I tried to confirm with :

htaccess:

RewriteRule ^main_controller/(.*)$ seo_controller/$1 [L,R=301]

Routes.php

$route['seo_controller/(:any)'] = "main_controller/$1";

inpage urls are :

http://local.com/main_controller

When clicked it works and after redirecting+routing it ends in :

http://local.com/seo_controller

But i'm sad it's not "totally invisible".

because it first use the "normal url" (/main_controller/) in the adress bar before it get redirected. It works in the end and execute /main_controller/ actions while the last url is /seo_controller/.

But it is not really satisfying, i would have had a totally invisible redirection. So i think i'm on the way for manual search and replace ;) then use only routing.

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