Why does:
http://example.com/robots.txt
redirect to:
http://www.example.com/mvc/view/robots/live-robots.txt
with these rules:
RewriteEngine On
RewriteBase /
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^(www\.)?example\.com
RewriteRule ^robots.txt /mvc/view/robots/live-robots.txt [L]
#.... 20 irrelevant lines for mobile rewrites
# Force the "www."
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^example\.com$ [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://www.example.com/$1 [R=301,L]
loading this however:
http://www.example.com/robots.txt
rewrites the live-robots.txt
as expected.
Shouldn't the L
flag stop the redirect in both cases and not get to the latter rule?
The L flag can be useful in this context to end the current round of mod_rewrite processing.
https://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/rewrite/flags.html
Current execution paths:
- http://example.com/robots.txt
- 301 served
- http://www.example.com/mvc/view/robots/live-robots.txt
and then
- http://www.example.com/robots.txt
- 200 (contents of mvc/view/robots/live-robots.txt are served)
I'm pretty sure it isn't a regex issue but here's testing of that too, https://regex101.com/r/eI9aC4/1.
80 GET /robots.txt 301
then80 GET /mvc/view/robots/live-robots.txt 304
.RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^example\.com [OR] RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^www\.example\.com
(after [OR] of course a linebreak)httpd.conf
, not.htaccess
.