Using tomcat, how do I get a request for http://www.mydomain.example
to redirect to http://www.mydomain.example/somethingelse/index.jsp
? I haven't even managed to get an index.html to display from http://mydomain.example
.
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is there a reason .htaccess or isapi would not work?– Nona UrbizSep 1, 2009 at 17:15
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6@NonaUrbiz: isn't .htaccess Apache http server specific and does not work with Tomcat?– Tim BütheNov 16, 2011 at 16:05
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For anyone else Tomcat don't seem to recommend it see their docs - wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/…– KCDMar 26, 2013 at 22:03
6 Answers
You can do this:
If your tomcat installation is default and you have not done any changes, then the default war will be ROOT.war
. Thus whenever you will call http://yourserver.example.com/
, it will call the index.html
or index.jsp
of your default WAR file. Make the following changes in your webapp/ROOT
folder for redirecting requests to http://yourserver.example.com/somewhere/else
:
Open
webapp/ROOT/WEB-INF/web.xml
, remove any servlet mapping with path/index.html
or/index.jsp
, and save.Remove
webapp/ROOT/index.html
, if it exists.Create the file
webapp/ROOT/index.jsp
with this line of content:<% response.sendRedirect("/some/where"); %>
or if you want to direct to a different server,
<% response.sendRedirect("http://otherserver.example.com/some/where"); %>
That's it.
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9
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11The sendRedirect command was all that was needed for me. index.jsp just contains: <% response.sendRedirect("/jasperserver"); %> Jan 11, 2013 at 11:20
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3
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Java wasn't working for me, so I used index.html with html redirection. stackoverflow.com/questions/5411538/redirect-from-an-html-page– user2534668Dec 8, 2017 at 13:10
Name your webapp WAR “ROOT.war” or containing folder “ROOT”
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2This approach causes a lot of problems when working on local and then deploying your application to multiple servers. Specially if you have multiple projects going to be deployed on different servers, and each can be ROOT on their own servers. Aug 20, 2019 at 15:49
Take a look at UrlRewriteFilter which is essentially a java-based implementation of Apache's mod_rewrite.
You'll need to extract it into ROOT
folder under your Tomcat's webapps
folder; you can then configure redirects to any other context within its WEB-INF/urlrewrite.xml
configuration file.
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UrlRewriteFilter is fast and worked well for me. the manual has some great options and this blog post also has some good info.– cwdMay 2, 2013 at 23:05
Tested and Working procedure:
Goto the file path
..\apache-tomcat-7.0.x\webapps\ROOT\index.jsp
remove the whole content or declare the below lines of code at the top of the index.jsp
<% response.sendRedirect("http://yourRedirectionURL"); %>
Please note that in jsp file you need to start the above line with <% and end with %>
What i did:
I added the following line inside of ROOT/index.jsp
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0;url=/somethingelse/index.jsp"/>
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2This might really screw up your analytics data, since the referral will be lost. Aug 31, 2015 at 10:21
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1One small benefit of this method is it can go in index.html instead of index.jsp– EddFeb 23, 2016 at 16:34
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Viral Patel's and ChssPly76's are both valid answers: stackoverflow.com/a/1363781/208576 stackoverflow.com/a/1363685/208576– AdrianRMJun 24, 2016 at 16:40
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This worked for me until I have enabled HTTPS. Switched to
<% response.sendRedirect("/some/where"); %>
and it works with HTTPS now. Apr 26, 2018 at 13:50
In Tomcat 8 you can also use the rewrite-valve
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/$
RewriteRule ^/(.*)$ /somethingelse/index.jsp
To setup the rewrite-valve look here:
http://tonyjunkes.com/blog/a-brief-look-at-the-rewrite-valve-in-tomcat-8/