13

I'd like to use the following to redirect pages that are no longer present in the database to the custom 404 page:

ob_start();
....
if ( !$found ):
  header( "Location: /404.php", true, 404 );
  exit();
endif;

But this actually does not redirect, but just shows an empty page (because of the exit() call before any output to the browser).

I've also tried the following:

if ( !$found ):
  header( "HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found" );
  exit();
endif;

With a 'ErrorDocument 404 /404.php' in my .htaccess file, but this also just shows an empty page.

And if I do this:

if ( !$found ):
  header( "HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found" );
  header( "Location: /404.php" );
  exit();
endif;

It does redirect, but with a 302 header.

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

4
  • A redirect is by definition a 302 header code which results in a new request. A 404 should NOT redirect anywhere - it's an end-of-the-line code. Instead of redirecting, simply do a include('404.php').
    – Marc B
    May 26, 2011 at 17:00
  • Thanks for all your input. I went with the header("HTTP\1.1 404 Not Found") followed by an include of the 404 page. Learning something new every day :-)
    – Vivienne
    May 26, 2011 at 17:19
  • you should select an answer by picking it
    – dynamic
    May 28, 2011 at 1:36
  • HTTP/1.1 not HTTP\1.1
    – kravietz
    Jan 23, 2016 at 14:48

5 Answers 5

12

I know it's a old issue but I just found it handy:

php set status header to 404 and add a refresh to correct page, like a 2 seconds after.

header('HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found');
header("Refresh:0; url=search.php");

Then you have the 404 page showing up a few second before redirecting to fx search page.

In my case, Symfony2, with a exception listener:

$request  = $event->getRequest();
$hostname = $request->getSchemeAndHttpHost();
$response->setStatusCode(404);
$response->setContent('<html>404, page not found</html>');
$response->headers->set('Refresh', '2;url='.$hostname.'/#!/404');

time ( 2) can be 0.2 if you wish very short time.

8

I've tried and make sure to check error_log file that is correct way is send 404 headers and then include error page to next line.

<?php
header('HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found');
include 'search.php'; // or 404.php whatever you want...
exit();
?>

Finally you have to use exit() for text based browsers.

0
8

You can't have an header 404 with a Location:

You should display the error page and set a meta refresh with the new url if you want to redirect

3

I think your problem is because of the output buffering you're starting, or because you can't redirect with a 404. The first code example shows the output buffer starting but exiting instead of cleaning the output buffer and stopping output buffering.

Change the first example to:

if (!$found) {
  ob_end_clean();
  header('Location: /404.php');
  exit();
}
2
  • ob_end_clean(); <-- Exactly what I wanted to say. Although there isn't really a need to use ob_start() at all?
    – AlanFoster
    May 26, 2011 at 17:04
  • The redirect does work if I remove the 404, like so: header( "Location: /404.php", true ). It's just that I want a 404 header to be sent to the browser and this isn't the case if I do that (a 302 header is sent in that case).
    – Vivienne
    May 26, 2011 at 17:11
-7

Maybe without redirect?

if ( !$found ):
   include('../404.php');
   exit();
endif;
2
  • 10
    "endif;" Really? please use if() { }, just for future reference
    – AlanFoster
    May 26, 2011 at 17:03
  • Yes, that actually would work (I've forgotten to mention that I've tried this as well), but the 404.php page then gives a bunch of errors because of certain include files and I'd have to rewrite a lot of the code for this page. But if nothing else works, I'll try this option. Thanks for the suggestion.
    – Vivienne
    May 26, 2011 at 17:06

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