Question (see below for longer explanations and things I have tried already) :
Is there a way of having the short URL http://example.com/qf56p9z redirect to the first file found on the server of the form /files/qf56p9z_(.*)
, and having it downloaded on the client with filename = (.*)
? (if possible, without PHP)
Background :
I have a file on server stored in /files/qf56p9z_blahblah.xls
that I would like to be accessible from this short URL :
(+the same for other thousands of files)
Moreover, I would like that when the user goes to this URL, the file will be downloaded on the client computer with the original filename, i.e. blahblah.xls
.
This may be possible with PHP, I tried things like (this could be easily automated for each of my thousands of files) :
<?php
header('Content-type: ...');
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="blahblah.xls"');
readfile('qf56p9z_blahblah.xls');
?>
But I see two problems with this method :
For each reading of the file by a client, PHP has to load the whole file in memory, and output the new file. This is much more CPU/memory consuming than if apache has just to send the file, without PHP
If one day I host all those files elsewhere (on Amazon S3 for example), the file will have to do this route :
Distant-Hosting (AmazonS3) ==> my server/header modified with PHP ==> client
It is a shame that the data has to do this instead of :
Distant-Hosting (AmazonS3) ==> client