Difference between revisions of "Apache Rewrite"
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Michael.mast (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<ref>http://tkurek.blogspot.com/2013/06/252f-instead-of-2f-in-url-apache.html</ref> I was scratching my head as to why %2 was being turned into %252 after a migration from one...") |
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| − | <ref>http://tkurek.blogspot.com/2013/06/252f-instead-of-2f-in-url-apache.html</ref> I was scratching my head as to why %2 was being turned into %252 after a migration from one vhost to another. Found out I needed to add [NE] to the rewrite rule in order for the slashed to be registered correctly. | + | ==No Encoding== |
| + | While working with nextcloud, I ran into a rewrite rule that would not keep slashes as I needed them. This was caused by the slashed being converted in a browser, then someone copying the converted URL as a link in another site. | ||
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| + | <ref>http://tkurek.blogspot.com/2013/06/252f-instead-of-2f-in-url-apache.html</ref> I was scratching my head as to why %2 was being turned into %252 after a migration from one vhost to | ||
| + | another. Found out I needed to add [NE] to the rewrite rule in order for the slashed to be registered correctly. | ||
Revision as of 12:53, 15 April 2019
No Encoding
While working with nextcloud, I ran into a rewrite rule that would not keep slashes as I needed them. This was caused by the slashed being converted in a browser, then someone copying the converted URL as a link in another site.
[1] I was scratching my head as to why %2 was being turned into %252 after a migration from one vhost to
another. Found out I needed to add [NE] to the rewrite rule in order for the slashed to be registered correctly.