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I want to create an application in PHP implementing virtual directory feature.
Example: http://mydomain.com/user001 will display the contents of the url http://mydomain.com/index.php?user=user001. How can I do that?

Note:
I am using Apache server.

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3 Answers 3

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The traditional way to do it is mod_rewrite.

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  • If I want to do that for a blogging application then I have to do mod_rewrite for every entry. Example: Every time I create a question in stackoverflow.com, it automatically creates a virtual directory for that question. Sep 7, 2010 at 18:21
  • no, you'd set up a regex in your rewrite rule to match any entry. Sep 7, 2010 at 18:26
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Please read this friendly article regarding rewrite.

Next, try to find a simple way in PHP to parse this variable $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'].

After doing that, you have the name of the directory and you can get its data from the DB.

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Intercept the HTTP request using the 'REQUEST_URI' element of $_SERVER. This returns (I believe) only the requested page, not the entire URI/URL - more info here. Once you've grabbed the page request, substitute the address of the actual file that's needed. For example, the user-friendly www.somewebsite.com/page01 becomes a request for the more clunky-sounding www.somewebsite.com?page01.php. This method won't create a virtual directory, as such, but should work okay. I have used a similar method on my own IT website, where each page is loaded via index.php, allowing that file to keep a log of visitors in real time (the site has Webalizer, which runs a day or so in arrears).

Rewriting the filename might work, although it's not to my personal taste. Using PHP to effect a URI/URL-swap would likely carry the benefit of reduced server demand, due to requiring less disk read/write time than filename rewrites.

I hope that helps.

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