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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 :

http://example.com/qf56p9z

(+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

1 Answer 1

1

You can use a combination of PHP and .htaccess (using mod_rewrite)

Site structure

  • /var/www/html/files/: directory that contains your files in {prefix}_{filename} format
  • /var/www/html/download.php: PHP script to locate the first file with given prefix
  • /var/www/html/.htaccess: with 2 mod_rewrite rules for rewriting the download URL

download.php

<?PHP

$files_dir = "files/";

if(isset($_GET['prefix'])){
    $files = glob($files_dir.$_GET['prefix']."_*");
    if(count($files) > 0) {
        $dl = strlen($files_dir);
        $pl = strlen($_GET['prefix']);
        $fn = substr($files[0], $dl+$pl+1);
        header("Location: d/".$_GET['prefix']."/".$fn);
    }
}

?>

This selects the first file with the required prefix and redirects to it.

.htaccess

RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule ^(\w+)$     download.php?prefix=$1 [L]
RewriteRule ^d/(.+)/(.+)$   files/$1_$2 [L]

The first rule rewrites the short URL to download.php and the second rule rewrites the URL to the original file location.

This is how it works

  1. http://example.com/qf56p9z -- .htaccess -> http://example.com/download.php?prefix=qf56p9z
  2. download.php -- PHP Redirect --> http://example.com/d/qf56p9z/blahblah.xls
  3. http://example.com/d/qf56p9z/blahblah.xls -- .htaccess --> http://example.com/files/qf56p9z_blahblah.xls

During all the above steps, browser's location bar URL remains the same without any change.

2
  • Waw! This is great. So here the PHP code only makes the redirection thing, right? PHP doesn't have to read the whole file in memory, is it right ?
    – Basj
    Oct 21, 2014 at 19:03
  • Yes. PHP will only know the filename; will not read its contents.
    – kums
    Oct 22, 2014 at 0:35

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