i have this in my .htaccess
RewriteRule ^search/([^/\.]+)\/(.*)$ search.php?s=$1¤tpage=$2 [L]
explantion: "s" is search term and "currentpage" is the pagination
ok when some body searches "bla bla" it works but when somebody searches now "bla bla videos"
"s" dont gets sets
here are some apache log with videos
- - [18/Aug/2011:10:49:13 -0700] "GET /search/bla-bla-videos/ HTTP/1.1" 200 32444
and now without videos
- - [18/Aug/2011:10:51:17 -0700] "GET /search/bla-bla/ HTTP/1.1" 200 32797 ?s=bla-bla¤tpage=
so im thinking somehow videos conflicts with the .htaccess
any ideas how to fix that?
Thanks
Related
I am working on emulating an embedded device that is being controlled via HTML commands. The controller issues URLs such as
http://192.168.0.10/cgi-bin/aw_cam?cmd=QFT&res=1
And these affect the device in specific ways. My goal is to make an emulator of the device so I need to capture and handle all such requests. I have successfully configured Apache to call my scripts and I can get access to the "cmd=QFT&res=1" control string by reading the value of QUERY_STRING. I am using Apache 2.4.18 on Ubuntu 16.04.5. The scripts are written in C++.
The problem I am running into is that some of the commands issued by the controller are of the following form:
http://192.168.0.10/cgi-bin/aw_ptz?cmd=#P80&res=1
http://192.168.0.10/cgi-bin/aw_ptz?cmd=#T50&res=1
For whatever reason, whoever designed the command structure decided to use the # character as part of the command. But since the '#' delimits the fragment part of the URL, the information after it never makes it to my script, which only receives "cmd="
Is there any way to force Apache to pass the entire string after the ? to my scripts? I cannot change the client or the protocol, only the server side.
Edit:
The apache log shows the entire URL (see portion of log file below), so even though # is supposed to be a fragment delimiter, it makes it into the log file at least but not the cgi script.
192.168.0.9 - - [27/Jan/2019:00:21:10 +0000] "GET /cgi-bin/aw_ptz?cmd=#P53&res=1 HTTP/1.0" 200 151 "-" "-"
192.168.0.9 - - [27/Jan/2019:00:21:11 +0000] "GET /cgi-bin/aw_ptz?cmd=#P66&res=1 HTTP/1.0" 200 151 "-" "-"
192.168.0.9 - - [27/Jan/2019:00:21:11 +0000] "GET /cgi-bin/aw_ptz?cmd=#P99&res=1 HTTP/1.0" 200 151 "-" "-"
192.168.0.9 - - [27/Jan/2019:00:21:11 +0000] "GET /cgi-bin/aw_ptz?cmd=#P76&res=1 HTTP/1.0" 200 151 "-" "-"
This seems to work:
RewriteCond %{THE_REQUEST} \s(.*)#(.*)\s
RewriteRule ^ http://localhost:8000%1#%2 [P,NE]
ProxyPass / http://localhost:8000/
ProxyPassReverse / http://localhost:8000/
(I had python simple http server listening on localhost:8000 to verify if hash was passed correctly
for a while I experienced that the google image bot is requesting a bunch of images in a single request. This request always ends up in a 404, but all images exist.
The request url consists a comma seperated list of URLs.
Here is a line from the apache access.log:
66.249.76.96 - - [21/Nov/2018:15:25:14 +0100] "GET /images/img1.jpg,https://example.com/images/img2.jpg,https://example.com/images/img3.jpg HTTP/1.1" 404 10459 "-" "Googlebot-Image/1.0"
Is this request type even possible? And how can I fix the server to serve the images?
Thanks in advance.
I am currently getting 500 errors from Apache using a alarming probe shell script that has been provided to myself.
Unfortunately I have not been able to get to the bottom of why the script generates a 500 error when attempting to access content locally on the server but using other methods like wget and telnet works fine.
The following are the Apache access log entries for each of the attempts:
Using Wget
127.0.0.1 - "" [19/Mar/2013:14:31:44 +1100] "GET /index.html HTTP/1.1" 200 1635 "-" "Wget/1.13.3" "-"
Using Telnet
127.0.0.1 - "" [20/Mar/2013:13:12:11 +1100] "GET /index.html HTTP/1.1" 200 1635 "-" "-" "-"
Using the Probe Scripts
127.0.0.1 - - [19/Mar/2013:14:33:56 +1100] "GET /index.html HTTP/1.1" 500 - "-" "" "-"
The only difference I can see is that the probe has a - instead of a "" in the user agent (3rd item) which either way tells me it wasn't passed in any of the instances (as this is expected since there is no authentication).
I've bumped up the logging for everything in Apache and can't figure out what is amiss. There is no processing involved, it's a static file, and I have attempted with other file types too, like images to no avail.
Does anyone have any ideas or has seen something similar?
Thanks,
Tony
I want to tell to my Apache that i want a redirect permanent rules.
I have theses 2 kinds of hits in my logs:
xx.xxx.xx.x - - [15/Mar/2013:08:14:21 +0100] "POST /oldEndPoint/services/toto HTTP/1.1" 200 - 6003 -
xx.xxx.xx.x - - [15/Mar/2013:08:15:40 +0100] "POST /newEndPoint/services/Tutu/toto HTTP/1.1" 200 - 1316 -
I want to tell to Apache, when he receive hits to /oldEndPoint/services/toto then he should do a redirect permanent (301) to the new url: /newEndPoint/services/Tutu/toto.
I have tried with this rule, but it's don't work, no redirect appear:
RedirectMatch 301 /modBackend/moderation/facebook /modFront/services/Moderation/facebook
Thanks!
You don't need RedirectMatch for simple redirects.
See just Redirect instead. You must give the old URL first and the new one last
Redirect /oldEndPoint/services/toto /newEndPoint/services/Tutu/toto
In Apache access.log, I am used to this kind of access log line:
127.0.0.1 - frank [10/Oct/2000:13:55:36 -0700] "GET /apache_pb.gif HTTP/1.0" 200 2326
I was checking some apache access logs this morning and found something I'm not used to:
192.168.1.10- - [20/Feb/2013:00:00:45 +0000] "POST /form/... 404 200 252 "-" "-" 435835
There are multiple status code. Does-it mean the request was sended multiple times (something like a failed/retry mechanism?