This is sort of a follow-up to Is there a way to force apache to return 404 instead of 403? which suggested RedirectMatch to 404 to accomplish this.

It works perfectly fine for most of anything, however if I request:

 http://example.com/.htaccess

I get a 403 and not a 404 if I have (or not) this in my .htaccess file:

RedirectMatch 404 ^/\.htaccess$

Is there a way to override the default 403 - Forbidden behavior of apache from inside the .htaccess file itself?

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This has to be done on the main Apache configuration file or in your vhost, where access to .ht* files are returned with HTTP 403. You can simply change it there without having to do rewrite. – mauris Oct 30 '11 at 15:27
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@thephpdeveloper: add that as an answer instead of a comment :) – Konerak Oct 30 '11 at 15:28
Thanks guys for confirming this. I only saw this one particular line once on the httpd.conf file relating to the .ht* files handling, so daren't confirm this. – mauris Oct 30 '11 at 15:29
@thephpdeveloper: No it has not to be done in the main apache config file or vhost configuration. – hakre Oct 30 '11 at 15:34
And for the close-voters: I need this for the URL layout of my application configuration, I don't want to re-configure the whole server which I can not anyway as it's shared hosting (a fine one with git if that matters). So I would merely think of it as any other mod_rewrite configuration question here on SO which are fine. – hakre Oct 30 '11 at 15:36
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2 Answers

This has to be done on the main Apache configuration file or in your vhost, where access to .ht* files are returned with HTTP 403.

You can simply change it there without having to do rewrite.

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No, it does not have to. – hakre Oct 30 '11 at 15:41
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up vote 0 down vote accepted

Just after I posted my question, I came to a solution towards the following:

  • Mimic the default server configuration's <Files> rules for .ht type of files.
  • Allow them.
  • Redirect them to 404.

Works like this:

<Files ~ "^\.ht">
  Order Deny,Allow
  Allow from all
  Satisfy All
  Redirect 404 /
</Files>
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