2

I have a rewrite rule in .htaccess

RewriteRule ^page/(.*)$ my-php-page.php?cid=$1

I am passing a encoded string which contains characters like = and + - this is the encoded string;

V1ihnKpip6WpnY7Wm5zn2+6YUtLf2KCh4eKY

When in the complete URL it's

http://www.example.com/my-php-page.php?cid=V1ihnKpip6WpnY7Wm5zn2+6YUtLf2KCh4eKY

now this doesn't work because of the + sign. So I want to send the cid urlencoded which then becomes;

http://www.example.com/my-php-page.php?cid=V1ihnKpip6WpnY7Wm5zn2%2B6YUtLf2KCh4eKY

The + sign becomes %2B. This works great, except when I try this through the RewriteRule in .htaccess - it doesn't work. So the URL would be

http://www.example.com/page/V1ihnKpip6WpnY7Wm5zn2%2B6YUtLf2KCh4eKY

The mypage.php file actually receives the cid as V1ihnKpip6WpnY7Wm5zn2 6YUtLf2KCh4eKY for some reason replacing %2B with a blank space.

Any ideas why it may be doing that? And how can I fix it. Many thanks for the help.

EDIT

I just found this solution - PHP $_GET var with urlencode and "&" bug - but I was wondering if there was a more elegant solution in .htaccess than having to urlencode the string twice?

2
  • your rewrite rule starts with page but your URL starts with some-page/
    – undone
    Dec 5, 2012 at 10:50
  • No it doesn't, the first 2 URL examples link directly to the PHP file, it doesn't use the rewrite. I've rewritten the question as my examples URL's were a bit confusing.
    – Wasim
    Dec 5, 2012 at 10:58

2 Answers 2

10

Try adding the B rewrite flag. This flag tells mod_rewrite to escape backreferences, the documentation says this:

_rewrite has to unescape URLs before mapping them, so backreferences will be unescaped at the time they are applied. Using the B flag, non-alphanumeric characters in backreferences will be escaped.

Since the % character is reserved for backreferences to groupings matched in RewriteCond statements preceeding the RewriteRule, mod_rewrite treats them differently and could end up attempting to replace the %2 with a blank backreference.

So your rule should look like this:

RewriteRule ^page/(.*)$ my-php-page.php?cid=$1 [B]
1
  • PHP interprets the + as a space, because historically the + was used for spaces in urls before RFC 3986.
    – Gerben
    Dec 5, 2012 at 21:17
0

If I understood right, to redirect this URL:

http://www.example.com/page/V1ihnKpip6WpnY7Wm5zn2+6YUtLf2KCh4eKY to this one

http://www.example.com/my-php-page.php?cid=V1ihnKpip6WpnY7Wm5zn2+6YUtLf2KCh4eKY

RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule ^page/([^/]*)  http://www.example.com/my-php-page.php?cid=$1 [L]

The result is:

http://www.example.com/my-php-page.php?cid=V1ihnKpip6WpnY7Wm5zn2+6YUtLf2KCh4eKY

with no change in the parameter.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.