I would like to add one more option...
Anyways - like others have said, using (.htaccess) mod_rewrite would probably be the best option.
However,
there surely can be many situations when you have to do it in PHP => you have 2 options:
- Append your redirection URI with
$_SERVER['QUERY_STRING']
- Append your redirection URI with a query built on your own :
http_build_query($_GET);
Option 2. - Advantages (+)
- Encodes the parameters ( default by PHP_QUERY_RFC1738 )
- you can easily add (or remove) some
$_GET
params like:
$_GET['new_param']="new value";
(add)
unset($_GET['param_to_remove']);
(remove)
- if environment (god knows why) does not provide a QUERY_STRING - you are probably still able to get the superglobal
$_GET
=> environmentaly independent
http_build_query()
's 1st param can actually be ANY array or object so you can build a $_GET
-like request from $_POST
or $o = new YourObject();
if necessary
- you can change argument separator if necessary
Option 2. - Dissadvantages (-)
- this kind of building query might be redundant ("good-for-nothing"), just unnecessary...
- if the query is big enaugh (maybe some attack?) it could have an affect on performace, because everytime there will be an array converted to a string & encoded
For more info see http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.http-build-query.php - a PHP manual's site about the http_build_query()
function which Returns a URL-encoded string.
http://domain.tld/path?get=params
instead of/path?get=params
, otherwise you may have to create a landing page with the meta redirect element.header(...
before it would work php.net/manual/en/function.header.php but it did work with a string of queries assembled from all of thehtmlspecialchars($_GET['foo']...htmlspecialchars($_GET['moo']
etc and assembling the search queries into a single var$bar
with ` . '&' . ` in between each of them so thenheader("Location: $bar ");
works withouthtmlspecialchars()
messing up the&