Error 404 .htaccess
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here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Rewrite http://www.inmotionhosting.com/support/website/how-to/setting-a-404-error-page-via-htaccess URL after redirecting 404 error htaccess up vote 11 down vote favorite 11 So I know this may seem a little strange but I for sake of consistency, I would like all my urls to appear in this form: http://domain.com/page/ So far I have gotten the regular pages working but I cannot seem to get the error pages working properly. If the user visits http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19962787/rewrite-url-after-redirecting-404-error-htaccess a page or directory that does not exist, I would like the browser to hard redirect to: http://domain.com/404/ This directory, however, will not actually exist. The real location of the error page will be under /pages/errors/404.php Also, although I do not need an exact answer for all the various errors (400, 401, 403, 404, 500), I will be applying whatever method is given to redirect all of these to their "proper" URL's (eg. http://domain.com/400/ http://domain.com/500/ etc.) Any ideas? .htaccess redirect url-rewriting rewrite custom-error-pages share|improve this question asked Nov 13 '13 at 19:36 Leinardo Smtih 2571313 add a comment| 4 Answers 4 active oldest votes up vote 16 down vote accepted Try this in your .htaccess: .htaccess ErrorDocument 404 http://example.com/404/ ErrorDocument 500 http://example.com/500/ # or map them to one error document: # ErrorDocument 404 /pages/errors/error_redirect.php # ErrorDocument 500 /pages/errors/error_redirect.php RewriteEngine On RewriteBase / RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/404/$ RewriteRule ^(.*)$ /pages/errors/404.php [L] RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/500/$ RewriteRule ^(.*)$ /pages/errors/500.php [L] # or map them to one error document: #RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/404/$ [OR] #RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} ^/500/$ #RewriteRule ^(.*)$ /pages/errors/error_redirect.php [L] The ErrorDocument redirects all 404s to a specific URL, all 500s to another url (re
Articles Code Recommended Most Popular .htaccess Error Documents for Beginners Apache allows you to customize the server at the directory level, using .htaccess files. This tutorial explains how to use them to serve custom 404 error (page not found), and other common error pages, to your users. https://www.addedbytes.com/articles/for-beginners/error-documents-for-beginners/ In Apache, you can set up each directory on your server individually, giving them different properties or requirements for access. And while you can do this through normal Apache configuration, some hosts may wish to give users the ability http://www.networksolutions.com/support/how-to-use-the-htaccess-file-to-display-custom-error-pages/ to set up their own virtual server how they like. And so we have .htaccess files, a way to set Apache directives on a directory by directory basis without the need for direct server access, and without being able error 404 to affect other directories on the same server. One up-side of this (amongst many) is that with a few short lines in an .htaccess file, you can tell your server that, for example, when a user asks for a page that doesn't exist, they are shown a customized error page instead of the bog-standard error page they've seen a million times before. If you visit http://www.addedbytes.com/random_made_up_address then you'll see this in action - instead of your browser's default error error 404 .htaccess page, you see an error page sent by my server to you, telling you that the page you asked for doesn't exist. This has a fair few uses. For example, my 404 (page not found) error page also sends me an email whenever somebody ends up there, telling me which page they were trying to find, and where they came from to find it - hopefully, this will help me to fix broken links without needing to trawl through mind-numbing error logs. [Aside: If you set up your custom error page to email you whenever a page isn't found, remember that "/favicon.ico" requests failing doesn't mean that a page is missing. Internet Explorer 5 assumes everyone has a "favicon" and so asks the server for it. It's best to filter error messages about missing "/favicon.ico" files from your error logging, if you plan to do any.] Setting up your htaccess file is a piece of cake. First things first, open notepad (or better yet, [url=http://www.editplus.com/]EditPlus2[/url]), and add the following to a new document: ErrorDocument 404 /404.html Next you need to save the file. You need to save it as ".htaccess". Not ".htaccess.txt", or "mysite.htaccess" - just ".htaccess". I know it sounds strange, but that is what these files are - just .htaccess files. Nothing else. Happy? If not, take a look at this [url=http://wsabstract.com/howto/htaccess.shtml].htaccess guide[/url], which also explains the naming convention of .h
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