27

I am trying to create a custom 404 error for my website. I am testing this out using XAMPP on Windows.

My directory structure is as follows:

error\404page.html
index.php
.htaccess

The content of my .htaccess file is:

ErrorDocument 404 error\404page.html

This produces the following result:

alt text

However this is not working - is it something to do with the way the slashes are or how I should be referencing the error document?

site site documents reside in a in a sub folder of the web root if that makes any difference to how I should reference?

When I change the file to be

ErrorDocument 404 /error/404page.html

I receive the following error message which isn't what is inside the html file I have linked - but it is different to what is listed above:

alt text

2
  • 2
    Have you tried changing the slash to a forward slash? Not sure if Apache supports backslashes. Aug 3, 2010 at 15:08
  • ErrorDocument 404 /error/404page.html is what it now is and this throws a 404 exception - however this isn't the exception that is in the html file that I have linked.
    – Malachi
    Aug 3, 2010 at 15:10

4 Answers 4

61

The ErrorDocument directive, when supplied a local URL path, expects the path to be fully qualified from the DocumentRoot. In your case, this means that the actual path to the ErrorDocument is

ErrorDocument 404 /JinPortfolio/error/404page.html

When you corrected it in your second try, the reason you see that page instead is because http://localhost/error/404page.html doesn't exist, hence the bit about there being a 404 error in locating the error handling document.

1
  • Just declare it in htaccess? I'v got Server error message! Oct 10, 2014 at 5:00
11

.htaccess files are disabled by default in Apache these days, due to performance issues. When .htaccess files are enabled, the web server must check for it on every hit in every subdirectory from where it resides.

Just figured it was important to note. If you want to turn on .htaccess files anyway, here's a link that explains it:

http://www.tildemark.com/enable-htaccess-on-apache/

6

Instead of adding them to your .htaccess file, you can add them to any of your virtual host files.

<VirtualHost *:80>

    DocumentRoot /var/www/mywebsite

    ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log
    CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/access.log combined

    ErrorDocument 404 /error-pages/404.html
    ErrorDocument 500 /error-pages/500.html
    ErrorDocument 503 /error-pages/503.html
    ErrorDocument 504 /error-pages/504.html

</VirtualHost>

Where error-pages is a subfolder in the mywebsite folder, containing the custom error pages. Make sure you restart your apache to view your changes.

$sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reload
1

Whatever url you enter as the default 404 page must be either absolute or relative from the root folder : That's why some make the mistake of treating its url like the rewrite engines' url which is relative from the folder where .htaccess is located.

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