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This relates to my previous question (which can be viewed here). I'd like to be able to remove the trailing slash from the URL so that it doesn't mess up certain areas of my site. The .htaccess code is here:

# -s = File Exists
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -s [OR]
# -l = Is a SymLink
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -l [OR]
# -d = Is a Directory
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -d
# if we match any of the above conditions - serve the file.
RewriteRule ^.*$ - [NC,L]

# only allows '.' in the "page" portion.
RewriteRule ^([^/.]+)/?$ index.php?section=$1 [L]
RewriteRule ^([^/.]+)/([^/]+)/?$ index.php?section=$1&page=$2 [L]
RewriteRule ^([^/.]+)/([^/]+)/([^/.]+)/?$ index.php?section=$1&page=$2&split=$3 [L]

As before, I'm out of my depth with this, so can anyone help out?

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Am I right in thinking it's the regex you're having trouble with? – Eric Sep 2 at 15:11
I suggested migrating this to serverfault where there are probably a lot more Apache admins. – Graham Lee Sep 2 at 15:12
Eric - yep, you're right. – different Sep 2 at 15:15
Sorry, not quite sure what you're asking. Doesn't your .htaccess already remove the slashes? – Eric Sep 2 at 15:24
The page served will be the same, but if the trailing slash is present then relative URIs will change. I.e a relative link from /page/etc to ./melon will be fine, linking to /page/melon, but /page/etc/ to ./melon will link to /page/etc/melon. – different Sep 2 at 15:29
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1 Answer

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I assume you are talking about the rule:

RewriteRule ^.*$ - [NC,L]

As the other already omit the trailing slash.

Try this instead:

RewriteRule ^(.*)/$ $1 [NC,L]

Here's what I see in the logs (abbreviated):

applying pattern '^(.*)/$' to uri 'host/'
rewrite 'host/' -> 'host'

So that seems OK to me.

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You should better use a permanent redirect than just an internal rewrite. – Gumbo Sep 2 at 18:54

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