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Take a very simple case as an example, say I have this URL:

http://www.example.com/65167.html

and I wish to serve that content under:

http://www.example.com/about

UPDATE: Note that the 'bad' URL is the canonical one (it's produced by a CMS which uses it internally for linking), so "/about" is just a way of polishing it.

I have two broad options: a server-side redirect or a client-side one. I always thought that server-side would be preferable since it's more efficient, i.e. HTTP traffic is approximately halved. However, SEO techniques tend to favour a single URL for a resource, thus client-side is to be preferred.

How do you resolve this conflict, and are there other factors I've omitted?

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3 Answers

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Apache HTTPD's mod_rewrite can leave a browser showing a SEO-friendly URL in its location bar while redirecting to a numeric URL on the server:

RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule ^/about$ /65167.html [L]
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While that's an option, it doesn't solve the problem: two URLs still exist for the same resource. In fact, the horrible nasty one is the canonical one (I'll update the question to mention that), so I don't think this fix is what I'm looking for. – Bobby Jack Nov 6 '08 at 12:38
You could use another redirect rule to ‘hide’ the 65157.html URL from incoming requests. Using remapping on the server side, a search engine has no way to know what is ‘canonical’ anyway, so if you don't link to the ‘ugly’ URL they probably won't pick it up. – bobince Nov 6 '08 at 12:41
Unfortunately, as per my question-edit, the CMS that generates these URLs also generates links to them, so they will remain public. – Bobby Jack Nov 6 '08 at 12:48
Urgh! In that case you would have to make the ‘(id).html’ 301 to the ‘about’, then mod_rewrite the ‘about’ back to the ‘(id).html’. And yes, that would involve an unnecessary HTTP request for each page, and might slow down Googlejuice propagation. Better plan: fix the CMS to link to the right URL. – bobince Nov 6 '08 at 15:13
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I'm pretty sure Google understands 301 Moved Permanently.

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A 301 is the wrong approach for this problem if you're redirecting from /about to /65167.html. Your CMS will only understand the 65167.html request but a 301 is basically telling Google that /about no longer exists and to index the 65167.html page.

Ignacio is correct. You need to implement either mod_rewrite or something similar depending on your platform and hide the CMS assuming that you can actually re-write all your CMS generated links to something more friendly.

A client side redirect is probably too complex to implement and a server side redirect will cause two requests to the server.

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You are right Michael. I don't know what I was thinking. I'll remove my stupid answer. – allesklar Dec 31 '08 at 17:03

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