Yes, taking the ^ off did not get it to rewrite.
Sigh.
On 02/23/2017 11:19 AM, Leroy Tennison wrote:
Hmmm, maybe I spoke too soon, why the second test didn't match isn't obvious to me (unless Apache regex is different from grep).
----- Original Message ----- From: "Leroy Tennison" leroy@datavoiceint.com To: "centos" centos@centos.org Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2017 10:15:54 AM Subject: Re: [CentOS] help with RewriteRule regexp
And it won't if 'http://webmail.domain' is the actual text, the ^ says "at the start of the line" (in other words, 'webmail.' must start in character position 1). Choices: Remove the caret and accept the consequence that all references to "webmail." will be changed or determine how to re-write (pardon the pun) the rule to narrow the scope to (such as) ^http://webmail%5C. (http:// at the beginning of the line). I'm not familiar with Apache regex implementation so I can't say that it will accept the construct I supplied, hopefully someone else can speak to that.
----- Original Message ----- From: "rgm" rgm@htt-consult.com To: "centos" centos@centos.org Sent: Thursday, February 23, 2017 9:43:59 AM Subject: Re: [CentOS] help with RewriteRule regexp
I tried:
RewriteRule ^webmail\.|/webmail
https://%%7BSERVER_NAME%7D%%7BREQUEST_URI%7D [L,R]
But that does not rewrite for http://webmail.domain
On 02/22/2017 06:41 PM, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
Seems I left off one point in this message.
This is to refine these rules in my Apache server.
RewriteCond %{SERVER_PORT} !^443$ RewriteRule ^.*$ https://%{SERVER_NAME}%{REQUEST_URI} [L,R]
I only want the rewrite if the URL includes webmail as I indicate below.
I have found that now the RewriteCond is 'recommended' to be changed to:
RewriteCond %{SERVER_PORT} !=443
But I have not found how to test for a string in the URL in the RewriteRule.
On 02/22/2017 10:02 AM, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
My regexp skills are somewhere infinitesimally close to zero. I have never really 'gotten' them.
That said, I have spent a couple hours already search for help to write a rewriterule that works on a string in the URL. In particular I want success if either of the following were provided:
webmail.domain (e.g. webmail.foo.com) server/webmail (e.g. www.foo.com/webmail)
And I have not found anything like this, nor do I know even close enough of regexp to recognize something like this in another expression.
Thanks for the help.
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